Wishaw Press

Give the medics who saved my life a pay rise

Pensioner will never forget their‘tired eyes’

- BY MICHAEL PRINGLE

A pensioner says she owes her life to “over worked doctors and nurses” at University HospitalWi­shaw after receiving life-saving treatment for blood clots.

Christine Lees took ill at home in mid-October.

The 83-year-old immediatel­y knew something was wrong and told her son Colin to call for an ambulance.

She explained: “I was sitting and I saw a door opening but where the door appeared from I haven’t a clue. I just said to Colin he’d better dial 999 for an emergency ambulance.

“I didn’t feel any chest pains or anything like that. The ambulance came within minutes, but I don’t remember much after that.

“I can remember someone kept talking to me, but I couldn’t tell you anything they said. They told me later I was having palpitatio­ns in the ambulance and my heart rate was too fast.

“It turned out it was heart failure due to blood clots.”

Colin added: “She l ooked greyish and when she said to get an ambulance I knew something was wrong.

“They were very quick getting here. She was very well looked after.”

Now back at home in Carluke, the pensioner didn’t undergo surgery but spent more than three weeks in the Wishaw hospital, much of that time in the coronary care unit.

“They saved my life tw ice,” Christine admits. “They got rid of one clot and thought that that was it before discoverin­g another.

“The staff were out of this world. A queen couldn’t have been treated any better than I was. Consultant­s, doctors, and especially the nurses, they were truly outstandin­g.”

Christine says the majority of her hospital stay is a bit of blur, but she can’t praise staff enough.

She said: “I owe my life to them. I can’t remember too much of my time spent in the coronary care unit due to the medication, but I can certainly remember the time I spent when I was moved to a ward.

“The nurses were all young lassies but when I looked at their eyes I saw old tired people.

“They looked so tired but they were only kids.

“They were always at my side with words of encouragem­ent and the biggest smiles, holding my hand.

“I was in high dependency and the staff made me a card for my birthday and stuck it up on my board, which was so nice of them.”

The mum-of-five, who has almost 50 grandchild­ren and great grandchild­ren, is thankful for the care she received but has taken a swipe at “overpaid” politician­s, and Scotland’s health minister in particular, over the pressure that NHS staff are currently under.

She continued: “Those young girls looked so tired and that remains vivid in my memory.

“The pittance of a pay they receive is an utter disgrace for the work they do. They should be given a pay equivalent to their never ending duties.

“I heard Humza Yousaf being interviewe­d about the NHS last week and his answers were very evasive and full of political jargon.

“The Scottish Government should give the nurses a decent pay rise. The politician­s are not shy in giving themselves one.

“The NHS needs drastic help in every section. I was in a room for four, but it had five in it.

“They are actually using cupboards as rooms to squeeze extra beds in. It’s just horrible and God knows how it’s happened to get to this. It’s so sad”.

 ?? ?? Touching gesture Christine with the card staff made for her during her hospital stay
Touching gesture Christine with the card staff made for her during her hospital stay

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom