Britain | Scalpel, please

The story of one NHS operation

And what it says about how to improve the productivity of Britain’s health service

Surgery under way on a patient.
Photograph: David Levene/eyevine
|Huddersfield

“WHAT WOULD you like to see?” asks the scrub nurse as a surgeon beside her feeds a wire through a patient’s urethra. It is a Friday afternoon in Theatre 2 at Huddersfield Royal Infirmary in West Yorkshire, and the surgical team is showing your correspondent their equipment. There are tweezers “to take out the specimen”; sponge rollers to soak up the blood. There is the resectoscope, an electrified half-moon wire to burn through bad bladder tissue. “But obviously you can’t see it because it’s in the patient,” she says.

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This article appeared in the Britain section of the print edition under the headline “Scalpel, please”

From the October 12th 2024 edition

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