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How Women Doctors Destroyed Healthcare in Britain

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In this article, Dr. Vernon Coleman paints a picture of how limitations put onto all general practitioners when vast numbers of women entered the field permanently changed healthcare.

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By Dr. Vernon Coleman

No other doctor in Britain will ever dare agree with the headline to this article but in their hearts both male and female doctors know that I am right.

All the current problems with the health service in the UK are a result of the deliberate increase in the number of women in medicine.

Inevitably, no one will debate this statement with me. But nor can they dispute what I am about to tell you.

First, a political decision was taken, half a century ago, to increase the number of female doctors. Medical schools were told to favour female applicants over male applicants when selecting potential medical students.

Second, many of the female doctors chose to go into general practice because it is easier to work part time as a GP than it is to work part time as a hospital consultant.

Third, female doctors didn’t want to do night calls or weekend calls or to work on bank holidays. They claimed that they had babies and children to care for and that they would not be safe if they had to make home visits at night.

Fourth, for the same reason of safety, female doctors wanted to stop doing home visits.

Fifth, with more female doctors in general practice (many of them working part time) there weren’t enough male doctors to do all the night calls and weekend calls. And so GPs stopped doing out of hours calls and started to work the same sort of hours as librarians. (Actually, these days the average GP works 24 hours a week – which is considerably less than most librarians.)

Sixth, the absence of GP cover at nights and weekends meant that patients who fell ill at night or at weekends had to call an ambulance, or take themselves to their local accident and emergency department. This dramatically overloaded the ambulance service and the local accident and emergency department.

Seventh, the refusal of GPs to visit patients at home meant that elderly patients had to be kept in hospital longer than would have been necessary if GPs had still been available to do visits. And so this put pressure on hospital beds.

Eighth, doctors everywhere found that their job satisfaction dropped dramatically. One of the most satisfying parts of a GP’s job used to be visiting patients at night and at weekends – making a diagnosis and providing emergency treatment on the spot. Without this job satisfaction, GPs found themselves becoming little more than dispensers of prescriptions and writers of referral letters to hospitals. (In the same way that pharmacists had become little more than dispensers of packets of pills.) In hospitals, doctors found themselves having to do the jobs GPs used to do.

And thus my case is proved.

Women doctors have not done so deliberately or individually, but as a group, they have destroyed healthcare in the United Kingdom.

And they have, I fear, destroyed it permanently.

And all this was done deliberately. The conspirators planned to destroy healthcare as part of their plan to reduce the size of the population.

For advice on staying alive, please read `Coleman’s Laws’ which is subtitled `Twelve essential medical secrets which could save your life’.

About the Author

Vernon Coleman MB ChB DSc practised medicine for ten years. He has been a full-time professional author for over 30 years. He is a novelist and campaigning writer and has written many non-fiction books.  He has written over 100 books which have been translated into 22 languages. On his website, www.vernoncoleman.com,  there are hundreds of articles which are free to read.

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author avatar
Rhoda Wilson
While previously it was a hobby culminating in writing articles for Wikipedia (until things made a drastic and undeniable turn in 2020) and a few books for private consumption, since March 2020 I have become a full-time researcher and writer in reaction to the global takeover that came into full view with the introduction of covid-19. For most of my life, I have tried to raise awareness that a small group of people planned to take over the world for their own benefit. There was no way I was going to sit back quietly and simply let them do it once they made their final move.

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A Person
A Person
1 year ago

Vernon sticking with the uncontroversial subjects? 😉

kdubya
kdubya
1 year ago

Can’t dispute that tsunami of logic.

mcc
mcc
1 year ago

My local GP is a middle aged mother hen, presiding over her brood of chicks. The said chicks, about 5 of them , all look about 14 years of age . Part timers all.
The whole lot of them only recently stopped wearing muzzles, and appointments with them were a farce with me yelling at them about 3 times “Sorry I can’t catch what you’re saying.” At least once I misunderstood what they said.

patricia bowman
patricia bowman
1 year ago

Vernon, you are an old timer like myself. Yes indeed medical treatment has changed and women as a contributing negative component has it’s merit. I firmly believe there are many others such as doctors going toward special areas of treatment. Heart .. lungs … etc. specialists. When I was a kid a doctor could tell many medical problems. Now a family doctor looks at you and sends you to the hospital to be looked at. Like a gate keeper or something. I’m in Montreal/Quebec. Just saying. Thanks … your on to something here.

ArcticSwan
ArcticSwan
Reply to  patricia bowman
1 year ago

Patricia I’m in Mtl as well. The state of health couldn’t-CAREless is appalling in this province, let alone the whole country. The reason GPs don’t want to even dx you is for fear of retaliation in case of false or mistaken dx, and insurance problems later on. they don’t want to risk being sued. As for women in the profession, they’re no better than men Drs, often feeling that the title empowers them to treat the patient/client (?) as a mere speck of inconvenient dust. I’m really sick & tired of their condescending attitude. As for me, the best thing to do is to stay out of hospitals & clinics, because once you’re in for a benign condition, you’re not sure how or if you’ll come out, especially at our age.

trackback
1 year ago

[…] How Women Doctors Destroyed Healthcare in Britain […]

Justim
Justim
1 year ago

Just to be 100% clear,
in every report I have EVER read on gender based wage gap, woman work part time (AKA 24hrs a week), and men work over time (AKA +40hrs a week), The use of the word “claim” to care for children is also accurate. I personally know several single woman, well past child bearing age, who work part time.

The issues of the medical system described above are identical those those observed in Australia.

I must admit the author overlooked a secondary factor in this, that of elitism. Onlt the best and most dedicated “parrots” make it into medicine. While no doubt some of those who make it are able to think gor themself, clearly learned not to in order to get into and pass their degrees. However, being ranked as the smartest and brightest ‘people’ in their cohort, comes at a price – high salaries/wages.

Another pivitol factor in woman’s newfound domination of the workplace. Men work to support their family. His wife, children, parents, parent inlaws etc. Data makes it clear, woman do not financially support husbands. If a man does not financially support himself, he is kicked out.

Once kicked out, he is likely to fall into depression and commit suicide.

There is a reason why the powers that be don’t investigate the cause of male suicide, male infertility, male depression, because those same powers do everything they can to cause it.

P T
P T
Reply to  Justim
1 year ago

“Only the best and most dedicated “parrots” make it into medicine.”

After seeing the covid debarcle, I wonder how smart an average doctor is. They can’t seem to think critically or sense when they are being lied to. It will be a rare doctor, I think, who can think for themselves. Thankfully there are some who are vocal and we know who they are.

Strange, some people from all walks of life could see through the charade, but many doctors couldn’t.

raj patel
raj patel
1 year ago

It’s the same with male employees taking time out of their work day to drop or pick up school kids, walk the dog etc. Nowadays both partners need to work due to the deliberately inflated cost of living – you only need to compare my parents’ generation to my generation and it is quite shocking how they have stolen wealth from us in just one generation via little or no pensions, increased taxation, off shoring of work, property prices, staged recessions/crisis (plandemics etc.) etc. etc.

Sheila B
Sheila B
1 year ago

My husband is a GP (past retirement age, doing out-of-hours shifts) although he’s never been part of the structure of a GP practice (doesn’t like the bureaucracy), preferring to work as a locum, in different places, also abroad, in addition to other non-GP medical functions.
He said this years ago, although he has nothing against his female colleagues. He also said the situation was warned about, many years ago, by a female doctor whose name I forget.
Men also tend to be less keen on working in professions that are taken over to a large extent by women.
If huge numbers of doctors are working part time, you also have to pay to train many more doctors to cover the same number of full-time-equivalent posts. He also reckons women doctors put up with more nonsense – both bureaucratic from the NHS and from manipulative patients.
I wonder if having a preponderance of women doctors meant more compliance with the authorities during the covid psyop and if that was part of the plan.

Marilynne L. Mellander
Marilynne L. Mellander
1 year ago

I was at the ER at my HMO yesterday and there were mostly women doctors, nurses and all types of healthcare workers..most were Hispanic….here in California, there are few Caucasian people in healthcare at this point….most of the male doctors were from India….healthcare is abysmal in California…the prevalence of scary tattoos on the healthcare workers if very unnerving..as a young girl I recall professional mostly white male doctors in white coats and female nurses in white uniforms..

Jane
Jane
Reply to  Marilynne L. Mellander
1 year ago

Your “whites only” and “men only” days are over. Deal with it.

Gordon Ritchie
Gordon Ritchie
1 year ago

Female police have also destroyed the police force in my estimation. I do not know how. But the police are just a political football now. They protect nobody and no property. They just side with political activists which the government desires to promote. The police are a threat to the security of the UK not a protection for it. I think women have been used. But since they started being police, the focus on even handed straight law enforcement of the basics has completely gone out of the window in favour of the latest political trending fad. I do not think that this is directly the fault of women police. But their introduction to that profession has somehow resulted in the destruction of that profession too.

My experience of women in the workplace in business is that they are fantastic executives. But something goes wrong in the professions. I think it must have something to do with headship and focus. Or perhaps with the male characteristic of not minding if they break things, whereas women are more likely to compromise so as to avoid breaking things?? So everything ends up compopromised in order that nothing gets broken except the entire compromised profession?

I must say that it is incredible to see such ideas in print. Well done The Exposé – well impressed. The Guardian would never dare print anything like Vernon’s logic.

Jane
Jane
Reply to  Gordon Ritchie
1 year ago

The police have always been pedophilic henchmen, you idiot. They were never for the people and they were even worse, if that’s possible, in the past.

Missy
Missy
1 year ago

Funny. A whiny acticle about female doctor’s won’t work enough after getting their license, written from an author working for just lousy 10 years as a practioner. Is that what’s called ‘british humour’?

P T
P T
Reply to  Missy
1 year ago

I tend to agree that blaming one gender for the profession’s woes is a copout. There is nothing stopping any of the male doctors doing home visits etc. And we have a choice. No need to seek a paternal view over women’s issues.

P T
P T
1 year ago

Vernon seems to place the woes of the medical profession on the women that enter it. So I have these questions.

1.      What profession allows men and women to work 24 hours a week and still have a living wage? Is that the sign of cartel-like behaviour on part of the medical unions like the AMA and equivalent, if they can control and limit the numbers entering their profession?

2.      As technology centralises medicine, how has that changed the doctor-patient relationship when medical records are electronic and accessible to the govt? When computers show flow charts for diagnosis and require less skill?

3.      As the West becomes more Marxist, will physicians receive comparatively lower wages, like that in the former Soviet Union, thus attracting more women than men?

Jane
Jane
1 year ago

If The Expose is going to post trash like this from this divisive, old, racist, misogynist, I’ll have to reconsider giving this site views or donating.

A Woman
A Woman
Reply to  Jane
1 year ago

I’m a woman. I’ve been reading articles and watching videos from Vernon Coleman for four years now. I’ve never found him to be racist, misogynist, or any other kind of a jerk.

I don’t live in the UK, so I can’t speak for their healthcare system, but I can say that I value Dr. Coleman’s opinion. I’m glad that it has been published and passed on. I am not in favor of the new obsession, where only one side of an issue is allowed to be spoken, heard, read, or thought about.

P T
P T
Reply to  A Woman
1 year ago

I am not adverse to an opinion I disagree with as well. It draws out the issues. In Australia, the only university course which has a government mandated quota is Medicine. This does not happen with any other lab intensive course. The universities can print as many of the other degree papers that they like, just not in medicine. So this has lead to a cartel-like behaviour where those in this profession can charge what they like, work only part-time, or in the case of well-earning surgeons, retire early.

As the ageing population ages, and more medical doctors are required, will this improve?

As for Vernon I have a few of his books, and I like his writings. On this point I disagree with this article’s heading.