Chaos
Use attributes for filter ! | |
Fictional universe | Archie Sonic the Hedgehog |
---|---|
Date of Reg. | |
Date of Upd. | |
ID | 3214596 |
About Chaos
Chaos is a character that appears in the Sonic the Hedgehog comic series and its spin-offs published by Archie Comics. It is a Chao that mutated into a water elemental, which was responsible for all but wiping out the Knuckles Clan of Echidnas.
2024 presidential election: 'It's like 2020 all over again - with higher stakes'
... We had all just lived through four years of fear and Chaos - how horribly the pandemic was handled, the fealty shown to authoritarian governments, the rise of hate crimes...
France riots ease as mayors call anti-violence rally
... " We refuse to let our country succumb to Chaos...
How 'rewiggling' Swindale Beck brought its fish back
...By Victoria Gill and Sophie WoodcockBBC News Climate and science team" Nature needs Chaos, it needs randomness, " says Lee Schofield from the RSPB...
Gary Lineker row goes to heart of BBC reputation - Ofcom boss
......
BBC boss denies climbdown over Lineker impartiality row
... " The suspension brought Chaos to schedules as pundits and commentators walked out in solidarity...
Children pay royal tribute with their word of 2022
... It was followed by the words " happy" and " Chaos"...
Nurses bitten and screens smashed - life in A& E
... " It was absolute Chaos - like something out of a third world country, " said the 77-year-old from Worcestershire...
'A& E is absolute chaos - I spent 15 hours on a trolley'
... " It was absolute Chaos - like something out of a third world country, " said the 77-year-old from Worcestershire...
'A& E is absolute chaos - I spent 15 hours on a trolley'
By Nick TriggleHealth correspondent
Lying on a trolley in a hospital corridor in pain from a broken hip, Anne Whitfield-Ray could not believe she was in The care of The NHS.
" It was absolute Chaos - Like something out of a Third World country, " said The 77-year-old from Worcestershire.
" The staff were rushed off their feet, paint was peeling off The Walls and patients were being squeezed in everywhere they could - in makeshift bays, in corridors and side rooms. It was horrific. "
Anne spent 15 hours in that position until a bed could be found for her.
Such delays used to be The Exception , something that happened on The odd occasion in The depths of winter.
Now they are commonplace. Latest figures show 40% of A& E patients who need admitting face what is called a trolley wait - a delay of four hours or more waiting for a bed to be found.
More Than 10% are waiting over 12 Hours . To put that in context, there have been more 12-hour trolley waits in 2022 So Far than in The Past 10 Years combined. Similar pressures are being reported in other parts of The UK.
These are The sickest and frailest patients - The ones who cannot be sent home immediately after treatment. Research has linked delays Like this with longer hospital stays, and even a higher risk of death.
By The Time patients get to this point, they may have already faced hours of waiting in A& E or, increasingly, stuck outside A& E in The back of an ambulance, as was The case for Anne.
She is now Back Home recovering after surgery, a few days After Her Fall In October.
She Said that despite her experience she cannot fault The staff: " They are doing The Best they can. But this is not what should be happening in The NHS.
" There are People much worse off than me - People who have strokes and heart attacks and face delays too. "
Dr Adrian Boyle, of The Royal College of Emergency Medicine , said it is The plight of patients Like Anne that worries him The Most .
" We Are not doing The Right thing by patients. There are lots of risks to People spending these long stays in emergency departments. Their care is delayed and diluted.
" Elderly People become Delirious - it's a miserable experience for them. And I see People regularly who are just so tired that they become confused, and it doesn't help them get better. "
Dr Boyle said that once someone has spent More Than six hours in A& E, there is a real increase in The Risk of severe harm: " We really need to stop People having these long stays in emergency departments. "
'Fundamental challenge'Dr Vin Diwakar of Nhs England said staff were working " round-The -clock" to try to see and treat patients as quickly as they can.
He Said The problems in A& E were caused by a lack of beds, with 19 out of every 20 currently occupied.
He Said The " fundamental challenge" was The difficulty hospitals were facing discharging patients who were medically fit to leave, but could not be released because of a lack of care in The community.
Every Day More Than half of patients ready to be discharged cannot be discharged.
Dr Diwakar said steps were being taken, including investment in community teams to stop People Ending Up in hospital,
A network of regional " war rooms" has also been created, he added, which monitor The pressures on local hospitals in Real Time , so they can try to manage demand by diverting ambulances away from The Most under-pressure hospitals.
Source of news: bbc.com