manor-hospital

Manor Hospital

Moat Road, Walsall, England, WS2 9PS
 
80,471 reviews

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Written by a carer
20th November 2019


Had a baby, everything was fine with the midwife we had, was told we would be home about twoish in the morning, gets to about half 3 and we haven't even seen the midwife that the previous one said was taking over for her at 12, comes in and basically tries to get us to force feed my daughter even though other midwife had said she was full, ended up getting moved to a maternity ward where I was told I wasn't allowed to go and had to come back at 10am even though they moved my girlfriend at half 4 in the morning, how did they honestly expect someone to get home at that time, nurses name was Joelle, if you get her, ask for a second opinion as she is the reason I've now got to wait nearly 6 hours in the hospital reception.

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Written by a patient
14th November 2019


Well looked after chandler shekhar. Great doctor

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Written by a patient
8th October 2019


Doctors, doctors secretaries, nurses, auxiliaries and all staff i encountered during my illness where excellent, treated me with care and respect. Doctors: Chander Shekhar and Balagopal Nurse: Ana Monica Rodrigues (Ward 20B) deserve a special mention.

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Written by a patient
25th September 2019


Manor Hospital and the staff have been great treating my Ulcerative Colitis over the last few years. Always being available for appointments, treating patients with care and respect, and putting our needs first. Thank You Manor Hospital, the staff and the NHS

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Written by a patient
13th June 2019


There seems to be a total lack of communication between departments. To be told that you have cancer in the cerebellum and lungs and to be left for weeks without a prognosis or treatment plan shows a lack of care, compassion or respect. Yes we all know that the NHS is under pressure but how long does it take to say the next stage is x number of weeks away, at least then you don't think you have been forgotten about. All (or most of) the staff and doctors were polite and apparently caring but they do not follow up if concerns are brought to their attention. If you report your concerns to the PALS unit they inform the ward you are on - beware there could be a backlash.

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Written by a carer
12th August 2018


My husband was taken into the Manor Hospital with a chest infection and gradually got worse over a few days until I was told by the consultant that he would not live. If that wasn't enough of a shock he told me that he had informed my husband that he was going to die. I couldn't believe that he could have been so cruel, so instead of my lovely husband slipping away peacefully, he spent his last few hours, although full of drugs, shouting out that he was dying. It was torment watching him and this will always be the last memory I have of him, he suffered so much, it was barbaric. I know from friends who work at the Manor that they have a policy to be honest with patients, but it would have been kinder just to let my husband think that he had a chance, its very, very wrong. I am writing this to advise other families to ask the staff not to tell patients they are dying, it's so, so cruel.

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Written by a carer
12th April 2018


If you have mental illness don’t go there ,bad A&E security,police to treat a young child male very aggressive,was really not acceptable.And nhs wrote a confusing referring?! This place cause a trauma to my son ,and me as well ,it supposed to be a safe place .I gave the one star to the doctors who cured my son at the end they were really good and understood their job .

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Written by a patient
20th February 2018


I asked for information off the desk staff only to be told “that’s not my job” It also says it’s a 2hour wait yet i’ve been here for 3 hours without any information given although i asked for it.

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Written by a patient
3rd January 2018


I was taken to A and E with a serious nosebleed and waited over 5 hours before a doctor came to see me while all the time my nose was pouring with blood. When the doctor finally arrived he packed my nose which was extremely painful. He then sent me to another hospital in Birmingham as there were no ENT doctors available at the Manor. When I arrived at Heartlands, they knew nothing about me and put me in a cubicle where I spent the rest of the night without seeing a doctor. The next morning I was sent back to the Manor and was admitted to ward 11 where I had to have a blood transfusion because of the delay in treatment when I went to A and E. This was the worst experience of my life and I still have nightmares about it. The staff on ward 11 were uncaring and surly which added to this terrible experience. I hope I never have to go there again

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Written by a patient
13th May 2017


On balance ... Avoid, avoid avoid !!! Demand a referral to the appropriate regional center which specialises in your condition, or be prepared to suffer inordinate delays whilst being passed from pillar to post. Increasingly it seems to provide a poor service for poor people, treating patients like the objects in the grammar of medicine. A bit like the proverbial curates egg, parts are good and match the mission statement, as for the system as a whole ... well, as clichés about Walsall indicate, a scale needs to be extended downward to accommodate the level of performance shown by the system as a whole. Individuals working within the Hospital system are frequently caring, committed and willing to go that extra mile, and then a bit more to provide care and to treat patients with compassion and consideration. As for the system as a whole it seems unfit for purpose and, despite the heroic extra efforts put in by many of those working within the system, makes a mockery of its vague and meaningless Mission Statement. Inordinate delays to diagnosis and treatment seem to be produced by an incredibly inefficient system to exchange data and informations between the various sub-systems. Inefficient sub-systems subvert and cancel out the efforts of more caring and efficient areas to provide an adequate patient experience and to provide timely treatment. My experiences at this hospital is both subjective and has overall not been good over the last 40 years. Venal Proctologists, who used long waiting lists and queue jumping private consultations to boost their income, were additionally towards the lower end of a surgical competence index ... a nurse working under him who knew me as a Lecturer said her dad was a butcher and he wouldn't allow him to cut up a carcass let alone prepare a joint, was horrified to find me amongst his patents recovering from surgery. In mitigation this venal character did have excellent social and counseling skills. My next experience was to appear at A&E after a heart attack to find equipment not working, the ward understaffed, apparently being run by a GP whose major skill was to exude confidence who had been drafted in as an emergency locum, who sent me home despite the protestations of the paramedics who had delivered me to his 'care'. Perhaps the hospital could raise the exception of a perfect storm. I had the MI at just after midnight and my GP had been struck off the list of medical practitioners for the second time, at the stroke of midnight. As I said the scales of evaluation needs to be extended downwards to cater for Walsall. My treatment was also affected because vital data was lost by the information systems within the Trust. When I finally met a cardiologist several painful and life threatening weeks later I discovered that I had had a heart attack and the severe bouts of angina I experienced were a result of this MI and not indigestion brought on by stress. I had to drag myself into A&E to deal with what I, but not the out of hours service contracted by my new GP surgery regarded as a pressing emergency of steadily deteriorating unstable angina the situation improved and despite a severe telling off for getting out of bed to read my chart and finding that I was allowed heroin to deal with my pain my treatment improved, appropriate medication was prescribed and I was stabilised. Apart from a slightly botched incision for the subsequent angiography the treatment was good. I was in an area of competence for a change. My next experience was not positive, but then the NHS as a whole and comparative medical systems abroad were unable to deal adequately with the clinical entity that afflicted me as a consequence of a viral infection. Normally this condition goes away by itself after a few days, weeks, months or years. the appreciate vestibular rehabilitation therapy (VRT) was unavailable. But the delays to treatment and for consultant to consultant referrals for appropriate diagnosis consequent upon the failures of the information system within the Manor Hospital would have significantly reduced the possibility of an adequate outcome from this treatment. It was not a case of too little too late, it was the 'not-got- go-away' situation compounded by the rudeness of 'a locum of consultant rank' for which I eventually got a reluctant and mealy mouthed apology after persistent harassment of those charged with wearing down those who dare to complain. Surprisingly my second MI was dealt with competently, with efficiency, care and compassion. My next encounter was horrific. Urology was appalling, the consultant was possibly a dab hand with the needle and knife but lacking in social skills. It is possible that the man was a high achiever and used his intelligence to somewhat mechanically apply techniques to achieve a facsimile of social interaction to compensate for being 'on the scale'. Or perhaps he was a rude, arrogant and angry man who objected to interacting with lesser mortals. The delays to diagnosis and his management of information flows resulted in a significant and life endangering delay to my treatment for cancer, way outside the Government time limit for referral to treatment. Once inside the Oncology section my treatment has seemed to be over-fulfilling the standards set out in the hospitals Mission Statesmen and shines like a rare beacon of excellence like the The National Opera and Ballet Theatre in Tirana, Albania in the Communist era ... described as a beautiful, healthy rose bush growing in a cess pit. Urology did not improve with the appointment of a new consultant. Inordinate delays before appointments, inadequate triage and had I not been rescued by a compassionate and prompt response from Oncology to a begging letter I sent to my ex-consultant, a serious and life threatening delay to treatment ... I had had bone scans, MRI and been referred for radiography before the Urology consultant deigned to see me as a result of a GPs emergency referral. I am still waiting for a follow up appointment for an operation designed to rectify damage consequent upon a failure of the Hospital Trust inability to circulate information between sub-systems resulting in poor treatment and internal trauma. This is the second time the follow up appointment has been missed out, relying on the ability of the 'PALS' service to souther and divert concerns raised by patients. Like these follow up appointments they are allowed to default until they time out and are dropped. A junior member of the Oncology team was appalled by my treatment. He did not linger and disappeared after trying to do something about it. Vascular surgery appears to work well and like oncology is a beacon of competence in an institution buffering from departmental competence interacting with systemic failure. Information fails to circulate in a timely manner and horrific delays to treatment occur when a functioning system like vascular surgery has to interact with chaotic systems like those of Urology. This is compounded by the inability of the Manor Hospitals information systems to communicate with those of the regional centers of excellence where matters like vascular and cardiac surgery are performed, resulting in inordinate delays to treatment even when pushed by a consultant to consultant referral. My recent experience of Cardiology has been catastrophic. Inordinate delays for appointments, long delays for diagnostic tests and having to be pro-active to minimise the delays as one is passed from pillar to post. You will need to harass consultants secretaries and co-ordinating PAs, who are by an large 'la creme de la creme' of secretarial competence, and still willing to try harder and go that extra mile' to speed up the transition from post back to pillar as delays lengthen to way beyond 18 weeks and one experiences chaos, incompetence but not treatment. Despite beacons of good practice, this is a failing institution.

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Short link to review Manor Hospital: http://iwgc.net/eb4ik