See here for essential background: https://hpanwo-hpwa.blogspot.com/2025/11/one-of-our-wheelchairs-is-missing.html.
As you can see, three days later
and the wheelchair was still there. It had been moved from the middle of the
sports pitches by the players and was parked by the shipping container they use
to store their equipment. Despite the fact I had called OxRad hospital porters
and told them, nobody had been round to pick it up. I didn't fancy its chances
much if it were left lying in the open for a lot longer. These vehicles have no
anti-corrosion protection, not being designed for outdoor work. A few weeks in
the elements and it would start to rust and the wheels would seize up. After
that there's not a lot you can do. Sure, you can take it to estates and they
might be able to clean it up and fix it, but they might not consider that worthwhile.
By then it might be easier and cheaper just to scrap it buy a new one; and the
new chair would not be nearly as good because modern designs are rubbish
compared to this one. By saving the chair I'd be saving them that expense; not to mention my brother HP's having to put up with substandard tools. A
hospital wheelchair like that costs many hundreds of pounds, about as much as a
high performance bicycle. Therefore I decided to take matters into my own
hands. I returned the vehicle to the hospital myself. This was not easy. As I
said, they're built for smooth hospital floors with no suspension or pneumatic
tyres and so it bumped and vibrated badly as I pushed it along the street. I
found it hard to manoeuvre over curbs and other obstructions. One of my clients
offered to help me by putting it in the back of her car and driving with me to
the hospital. I thanked her for the offer, but I knew it wouldn't fit. This
model is designed exclusively for inpatient use and never for disabled people
in the community. It was far too big and heavy to put into a car, and it had no
way of folding or disassembling. I also abandoned my previous plan to take it
on the bus. I wasn't sure the driver would let me and I'd have had a long wait
at the stop on a Sunday; so I walked with it... I portered. It felt very
nostalgic, especially when I reached the hospital itself and was wheeling it
along the corridors. I had a text from my daughter asking: "Dad, why are
you walking along Hollow
Way pushing a
wheelchair?" She had seen me pass from the window of her gym. I managed to
take a short cut through an alleyway and gambled that the bike bars at the
entrance to the Churchill Hospital would be wide enough to let me through with it. I
delivered the wheelchair to the porters' lodge only to be told I was at the
wrong hospital! This chair came from the JRH. The Churchill porters are under
G4S and not Mitie; which is worse? These contractors tend to be all the same. I
told my Extremely Proud and Dignified Brother Porters that I wasn't going to
wheel it any further and asked them to arrange for ambulance transport to move
it, which shouldn't be difficult. I spent a few minutes talking to my bother
porters. I didn't recognize any of them; but I did get the selfie you see below
with MEP&DBP Izzu. After that I left the vehicle by the main entrance where
they're supposed to be stored. Mission accomplished!
Sunday, 30 November 2025
Friday, 28 November 2025
One of Our Wheelchairs is Missing!
Yesterday I had an amazing
experience. I was walking through a small park in Donnington, Oxford , close to where I used to live, when I came across the
weirdest thing imaginable. I felt like how the characters in the film Close Encounters of the Third Kind must
have felt when they came across aeroplanes and a full-sized ship in the middle
of a desert. In this case it was an equally incongruous apparition, a second generation
Roma Medical Aids hospital wheelchair just sitting there in the middle of the
park, right in the area marked out as a football pitch. See the photographs
above and below which I took. How it got there I cannot imagine. Maybe the
aliens in Steven Spielberg's classic movie and real and they scooped up the chair from
one of the OxRad hospitals, maybe with a patient in it whom they abducted, and
dumped the vehicle from their flying saucer along with the planes of the lost
Flight 19 and SS Cotopaxi. I assume
they will come back to earth in fifty years to return the patient, who will be
the same age as they are now. I'm not sure which hospital it came from because
there is no plate on it to identify it; unlike in my day when every chair had
on it "JRH PORTERS". It has a Mitie sticker, but unfortunately the
latest tin pot contractor brought in specially to trash the service is
everywhere, see: https://hpanwo-hpwa.blogspot.com/2021/11/the-mitie-hps.html.
I made a guess that it was the JR and called the porters there. I had to go
through a long and complicated maze of automated voices before I finally
managed to speak to a brother porter. It was not somebody I recognized. I told
him about the wheelchair and ended the call with "I used to be one of you;
pride and dignity!" I do hope they come and collect the chair soon. That
model is actually one of the best. It's a neat, manoeuvrable and compact front
wheel steering vehicle. Note the shopping trolley style lock chain to stop them being taken by members of the public. It's an adaptation of the old Bristol Maid design, see:
https://hpanwo-hpwa.blogspot.com/2023/11/acute-care-vehicles-2-second-generation.html.
This is not the first time this has occurred. Back in the 2000's I once had to
rescue a wheelchair from Headington Conservative Club, a good half mile from
the John Radcliffe. Again, its enigmatic teleportation remains unsolved to this
day.
Thursday, 20 November 2025
"Forget it!"
Whenever I ask somebody what is
the most annoying thing another person do they can always give me an answer,
and it varies with different individuals. For me it is probably when a stranger
says something to me that I can't hear. I am not deaf, but sometimes they speak
indistinctly or there is a lot of background noise. I ask them to repeat it and
if they do I still sometimes can't hear them and ask again. At that point, or
sometimes after a third try, some people will just wave me away impatiently and
groan "forget it!", as if it's my fault; as if I'm somehow deficient
for not having the ears of a bat and can pick up their slurred mumblings from
forty feet away. This happened to me a few days ago. I was walking past a house
in Rose Hill, Oxford and a woman stuck her head out of the door and did just
those things and then slammed the door in my face. About twenty minutes later I
was walking past her house in the opposite direction and sang one of my HP
songs in a loud voice:
Porters' Dignity
Porters' Dignity
Porters' Dignity
And Porters' Dignity
Porters' Dignity
Oh, Porters' Dignity
Porters' Dignity
And Porters' Dignity
Porters' Dignity
Porters' Dignity
And Porters' Dignity
Porters' Dignity
Oh, Porters' Dignity
Porters' Dignity
And Porters' Dignity
Porters' Pride
Porters' Pride
Porters' Pride
And Porters' Pride
Porters' Pride
Oh, Porters' Pride
Porters' Pride
And Porters' Pride
Porters' Pride
Porters' Pride
And Porters' Pride
Porters' Pride
Oh, Porters' Pride
Porters' Pride
And Porters' Pride
I'm sure she heard that! It's the
same one I've sung doing other dig stats, for example: https://hpanwo-hpwa.blogspot.com/2017/11/fantastic-dignity-statement.html.
I consider this possibly my finest civilian dignity statement.
Friday, 14 November 2025
Kettle Canning
Unusually for me, there is no rant in this article, no incitement
to moral crusade. This is purely a practical tip for hospital porters; who,
like many of us, have no microwave oven or any other means to cook food in
their lodge. Sadly management frequently fails to condescend to provide us with
such an appliance. Several HP's have independently invented a substitute
method, including me. I call it "kettle canning". It only works with
canned food. This is how to do it. Place the can in a kettle. Fill the kettle
to a level where the can is completely submerged. Boil it and then let it stand
for a few minutes; boil it again after about three minutes. Pour the water away
down a sink, taking care not to splash the hot water in a way that could hurt
people. Then take out the can; it will probably be too hot to handle with bare
hands and you'll need a glove, cloth or a wad of tissue. The label will
probably come off during the process so make sure the wet paper is not left in
the kettle. Wash out the kettle so it can be used again, open the can and
enjoy.
Monday, 10 November 2025
All Labour Requires Intelligence
The Russian-American philosopher and author Ayn Rand has
come up on the HPWA before. In the background links below you'll see where her
work has previously influenced this project. In her novels there is a powerful
message against snobbery. Many of the heroes have a working class background,
most notably Howard Roark. The main characters all have friends in so-called
"less important" professions; the man who runs the cigarette kiosk at
the railway station, the trusty metal workers at Hank Reardon's factory, the
stowaway on the train, the typewriter technician in the first chapter of Atlas Shrugged etc. This is proof that
one does not have to be leftwing to champion the welfare of the rank-and-file citizens.
I've found that of all the people I have encountered, both personally and by
repute, Ayn Rand is one of the few who would truly have understood me when I
say I'm proud to be a hospital porter. In this audio recording you can hear Rand
describe her thoughts personally, see: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5zFCnxjPk64.
This was made in October 1980 during an interview for The Raymond Newman Journal. As a former hospital porter I approve
of this message. As she says, all labour requires intelligence and being
"lower" does not make you less worthy. There is nothing wrong at all
with saying: "I am proud to do..." whatever your occupation is, even
if it is one with low conventional social status. There is no such thing as a
menial job; jobs are either done well or they are done badly.
See here for background: https://hpanwo-hpwa.blogspot.com/2025/03/he-loved-his-work.html.
And: https://hpanwo.blogspot.com/2018/11/we-living-by-ayn-rand.html.
See here for background: https://hpanwo-hpwa.blogspot.com/2025/03/he-loved-his-work.html.
And: https://hpanwo.blogspot.com/2018/11/we-living-by-ayn-rand.html.
Monday, 3 November 2025
Xmas Idea
It may only be November, but the modern world moves fast and
Christmas is coming soon, it seems. Therefore now it is timely to wonder what
present you will buy for the hospital porter who seems to have everything.
There is a fashion meme going round at the moment which centres on the slogan:
"It's a porter thing; you wouldn't understand." I'm not sure where this
catchphrase originated or what "porter" refers to. I thought it might
mean Porter ale, but it doesn't specifically. That fount of universal wisdom,
Google AI, cannot identify where it originated. Despite this it has appeared on
a wide variety of merchandize, such as this hat: https://mfamilyhub.com/products/Porter-thing-washed-baseball-cap
and illustrated above. Also this jersey: https://seseable.co.uk/products/its-porter-thing-wouldnt-understand-family-name-women-sweatshirt-g7oj8jM9K9Ie.
The good news also comes from Google AI, because I asked it: "Could it apply to hospital porters?"
and the response was: "Yes, the
phrase could easily apply to hospital porters. While the phrase 'It's a Porter
thing; you wouldn't understand' primarily appears online as a personalized
name-based meme, for people with the surname or first name 'Porter'; it is also
used in a professional context. You can find merchandise such as mugs and
t-shirts featuring this specific slogan aimed at hospital porters, highlighting
the specific, often challenging and varied, duties of the job that other
hospital staff might not fully appreciate; such as moving patients, equipment,
hazardous waste, deceased patients, etc. This is different from other types of
porters, such as hotel porters or baggage porters. In this context, the 'porter
thing' refers to the shared experiences, inside jokes, unique challenges, and
essential role that people in that specific profession understand, which those
outside the role; e.g. doctors, nurses, administration etc, would not. It is a light-hearted
way for a specific group of workers to acknowledge their unique contribution
and camaraderie." What can I say except... copy that! So I think we
have the perfect stocking filler for that wonderful HP in your life who's bored
with getting new pairs of socks or cheap supermarket Scotch every year.
Surprise and delight him in Christmas 2025!
Sunday, 26 October 2025
Clock Change
In the early hours of this morning, Sunday the 26th of
October, all clocks in Britain
will be wound back one hour. 01:59:59
will be followed by 01:00:00 , not 02:00:00 as it normally does. This is common
practice across much of the world, mostly in countries lying in the temperate
or polar zones of the planet. Its purpose is to make the evenings as long and
bright as possible. This has always caused a few problems for many people,
especially in the NHS. As a twenty-four-seven operation we are working during the
moment of this change which means service people on nightshift tonight will
have to work an extra hour. The portering nightshift is 10 PM to 6 AM which is eight hours; but tonight we'll be
working nine. We will not get paid for that extra hour. Unions have been trying
for years to remedy that discrepancy, but management reply with: "Well in
spring when the clock goes forward you work seven hours and get paid for eight
so it's as broad as it's long." However there's no guarantee the same
porters will be on nightshift on both occasions. We also have to be careful
with log records during that extra hour, making sure to add the labels to every
time stamp: (BST) for British Summer Time and (GMT) for Greenwich Mean Time. As
for the early shift, that always relieves the nightshift at 6 AM regardless... or it should. When the clocks go forward
in spring many members of the early shift will turn up at 7 AM and say: "Did
the clocks go forward? Damn! I forgot about that." Are they just saying that
as an excuse to turn up late? Probably. How do I know? Because I can bet that
not a single porter will forget about the clocks going back tomorrow morning
and turn up an hour early.
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