Daily Mail

Killjoy NHS bosses are the enema within ...

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THING is, I had planned to take the Bank Holiday weekend off. There was supposed to be a ‘Littlejohn Is Away’ logo where this column usually appears.

Unfortunat­ely, no one bothered to tell the Government department which meets once a week to dream up something for me to write about. They’ve been working overtime this month. And just when I thought it would be the perfect time to put my feet up for a few days, it’s been the turn of the National Health Service to get in on the act.

Before they grabbed a six-pack of red Stripe and headed off to celebrate diversity and smoke a few spliffs at the Notting Hill Carnival, they decided to lob another dolly drop my way. What can a poor boy do? It would be rude not to. We’re talking gift horses and mouths here. over ’ere son, on me ’ead. for the past 30-odd years, men in Ludlow, Shropshire, have dressed up as nurses and pushed a bed through the streets to raise money for the NHS.

It might not be as big a deal as the Notting Hill Carnival, but it has certainly become one of the highlights of the social calendar in the market town, drawing large, enthusiast­ic crowds from miles around.

This year, rattling their buckets as they ran, the ‘nurses’ raked in £2,500, 00, which was to go towards a new ECG (electrocar­diogram) machine for the local hospital.

But the po-faced, Guardianis­ta jobsworths who run the Shropshire Community Healthcare NHS Trust have decided arbitraril­y that they won’t accept the money — because they consider the event to be sexist and offensive.

OH,for heaven’s sake. In a statement, chief executive Jan Ditheridge and chairman Mike ridley said: ‘The presentati­on of men dressed as female nurses in a highly sexualised and demeaning way is wrong, very outdated and insulting to the profession.

‘It isn’t oK to portray healthcare profession­als in this way. We have previously asked that this doesn’t happen and therefore don’t think it’s right to accept any money associated with this activity.’

They were backed by Dr Simon freeman, who describes himself as ‘ accountabl­e officer’ — whatever the hell that is when it’s at home — for the Shropshire clinical commission­ing group, who insisted: ‘ The objectific­ation of women is not acceptable.’

In the immortal words of the late, great Bruce forsyth: Where do they find these people?

Ms Ditheridge (you just knew it was going to be a Ms, didn’t you?) said they had warned the organisers in advance that the Trust disapprove­d of men dressing up as female nurses, sorry ‘healthcare profession­als’. So when the chaps from the League of friends of Ludlow Hospital attempted to present their cheque for two-andahalf grand it was a case of ‘thanks, but no thanks’.

To which the only sane reaction is: how dare they? How bloody dare they turn down a sizeable donation, obtained in the most generous of spirits, to a health service which is constantly pleading poverty?

Peter Corfield, chairman of the League of friends, described their refusal to take the money as ridiculous.ri ‘ In these times of austerity you’d expect they would want all the help they can get.

‘This bed push is a traditiona­l th thing. The whole thing is a lightheart­ed h fundraiser. These guys, y year after year, rain or shine, give u up their free time to raise funds fo for the hospital — a hospital ev everyone here holds dear.

‘We are just a group of blokes tr trying to raise funds for our local c community and have a laugh at th the same time. of course they’re a angry they’ve been singled out a and demonised in this way.’

I don’t blame them. over the years, they have raised tens of thousands of pounds for the NHS by the annual bed push.

Where does Mizz Ditherer and her little gang of moral guardians get the idea that somehow they have the right to reject money raised by men dressing up as nurses, simply because it offends their own warped sense of what is or isn’t politicall­y acceptable?

Their job is to run the health service for the benefit of everyone in the Ludlow area, including the guys who gave up their spare time to make a spectacle of themselves pushing a bed through the streets while dressed up as Kenneth Cope in Carry on Matron.

Anyone who can interpret this event as ‘highly sexualised’ and ‘demeaning’ belongs in a padded cell in one of the NHS’s secure institutio­ns. The health service isn’t so flush with funds that it can spurn a £2,500 donation towards a much-needed piece of equipment for heart patients.

Mizz Ditherer and her ‘accountabl­e officer’ sidekick need to be reminded in no uncertain terms to whom they are accountabl­e.

They don’t own the health service. It belongs to everyone. They are mere hired hands and are not entitled to impose their political bigotry on the rest of us, especially to the detriment of the medical services they’re employed to provide.

ANYWAY,NYWAY, apart from themselves, on whose behalf, exactly, are they taking offence? No one has ever complained about the event, not even members of the local cross-dressing community.

on the website of the Shropshire Star newspaper, one Ludlow resident commented: ‘I am transgende­red, the child of a medical practition­er and someone who supports gender equality.

‘In short, I’m in a position to have a claim to be offended by this method of fundraisin­g — and the decision by the Shropshire Community Health NHS Trust has disgusted me. This money was raised in all good faith by people who gave up their time to follow a tradition that has been going for 30 years. With the country and the NHS in the state it’s in, it is ludicrous to turn this down.’

Precisely. Nurse!

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