Post by Dr. Hayden Bishop (Pookie) on Jul 6, 2007 9:06:14 GMT -5
Dont' cha...?
Anways this is our advertisement :
To get the true meaning of what Halton is like; you have to go back to its founding in 1959. Now Halton was never a normal hospital, especially with a founder like James Andersen, the son of an oil company owner, hardly what you would expect to open up a hospital. Which was frankly true, the whole purpose of Halton Hospital was to provide a 'new type of hospital for the people' in other words a publicity stunt.
Halton's staff were usually new medical students who scraped the bottom of the barrel and nurses who took a first aid course as their proper training.
A result of the incompetent staff and the influx of patient’s year in and year out, Halton had a notorious record of malpractice and patient deaths. Slip ups in the surgery room, wrongly prescribed medication, even a few misdiagnosis were leading causes of death in that hospital.
Disregarding this, the government still let Halton open it doors, but over the years their clientele changed to the poorest and the most desperate patients you could ever find. After their last malpractice death, a 9 year old going in for a tonsil removal coming out dead, Halton closed it doors in 1985.
The one thing Halton never had to worry about was money and this was a leading factor to why the hospital was reopened in 2005; James Andersen had passed on and left his fortune to the hospital.
Now in hopes of compensating for all those deaths Halton has a goal to make itself one of the best hospitals in Britain. They've hired a new workforce, their doors are flooding full of patients, but will it work? Or will there be more complications then congratulations. . .
[/quote]
This is our advertising code:
So advertise away!
Anways this is our advertisement :
Halton Hospital
Operations. Relations. Complications. Fustrations.
To get the true meaning of what Halton is like; you have to go back to its founding in 1959. Now Halton was never a normal hospital, especially with a founder like James Andersen, the son of an oil company owner, hardly what you would expect to open up a hospital. Which was frankly true, the whole purpose of Halton Hospital was to provide a 'new type of hospital for the people' in other words a publicity stunt.
Halton's staff were usually new medical students who scraped the bottom of the barrel and nurses who took a first aid course as their proper training.
A result of the incompetent staff and the influx of patient’s year in and year out, Halton had a notorious record of malpractice and patient deaths. Slip ups in the surgery room, wrongly prescribed medication, even a few misdiagnosis were leading causes of death in that hospital.
Disregarding this, the government still let Halton open it doors, but over the years their clientele changed to the poorest and the most desperate patients you could ever find. After their last malpractice death, a 9 year old going in for a tonsil removal coming out dead, Halton closed it doors in 1985.
The one thing Halton never had to worry about was money and this was a leading factor to why the hospital was reopened in 2005; James Andersen had passed on and left his fortune to the hospital.
Now in hopes of compensating for all those deaths Halton has a goal to make itself one of the best hospitals in Britain. They've hired a new workforce, their doors are flooding full of patients, but will it work? Or will there be more complications then congratulations. . .
[/quote]
This is our advertising code:
[center][size=6]Halton Hospital[/size][/center]
[center][img]http://img526.imageshack.us/img526/6721/78394165pj0.gif[/img][/center]
[center][u]Operations. Relations. Complications. Fustrations.[/u][/center]
[center]
[sub]To get the true meaning of what Halton is like; you have to go back to its founding in 1959. Now Halton was never a normal hospital, especially with a founder like James Andersen, the son of an oil company owner, hardly what you would expect to open up a hospital. Which was frankly true, the whole purpose of Halton Hospital was to provide a 'new type of hospital for the people' in other words a publicity stunt.
Halton's staff were usually new medical students who scraped the bottom of the barrel and nurses who took a first aid course as their proper training.
A result of the incompetent staff and the influx of patient’s year in and year out, Halton had a notorious record of malpractice and patient deaths. Slip ups in the surgery room, wrongly prescribed medication, even a few misdiagnosis were leading causes of death in that hospital.
Disregarding this, the government still let Halton open it doors, but over the years their clientele changed to the poorest and the most desperate patients you could ever find. After their last malpractice death, a 9 year old going in for a tonsil removal coming out dead, Halton closed it doors in 1985.
The one thing Halton never had to worry about was money and this was a leading factor to why the hospital was reopened in 2005; James Andersen had passed on and left his fortune to the hospital.
Now in hopes of compensating for all those deaths Halton has a goal to make itself one of the best hospitals in Britain. They've hired a new workforce, their doors are flooding full of patients, but will it work? Or will there be more complications then congratulations. . .[/sub][/center]
[center][SIZE=5]haltonhospital.proboards60.com[/size][/center]
So advertise away!