Sorry, I haven't been very well today - 20 Jan 2026 - (1,018 words) - Jaynes Baby Bank
Sorry, I haven't been very well today.
I've had to go back to bed.
Not well at all.
All for stomach problems.
Anyway, it's all been investigators.
We know that.
So anyway, this has come up today and this is, you know, this is the difference between having a trained health professional on site and having people who adjust first aid trained on site.
Okay, so one of our street homeless guys turned up, so they knew him.
Freezing cold and they could hardly stand.
Now straight away, straight away to me, right, after studying nursing and other aspects of nursing, right, being a carer, being a classroom assistant, right.
Oh and I think on the Sherlock website they said classroom assistant, blah blah blah.
Yeah, well I was pre-Ian Huntley.
Yes, so pre-Ian Huntley, nobody had to register.
Nobody had to have a check pre-Ian Huntley and Maxine Carr.
It was after Maxine Carr and Ian Huntley, everybody had to be, have a rolling DBS.
Not just a DBS, a rolling one.
And by law they have to sign to say if they've got anything pending too.
So straight away to me there, right, freezing cold and could hardly stand.
I'd have been on the phone 999 ambulance, whether the client individual wanted it or not, right.
Now these people have been working with the homeless a long time, okay.
If anything happened to that man, and let's hope it doesn't, right, then they could be sued and they could go to prison, right, because they were the responsible registered charity dealing with our gentleman.
Okay, so if anything happened to that man then, tomorrow, the day after, within a reasonable amount of time, I know nurses that have been pulled in that finished their shift at six o'clock, didn't even give medication at eight o'clock and has been pulled into NMC meetings to discuss patients who died 28 days later.
So that should have been an ambulance job if he couldn't stand.
Now if that was a baby and a mother, you see how they're unqualified, you see how we are a qualified baby bank and they are an unqualified baby bank and many other baby banks are unqualified, not just this one.
Because if that was a baby that could have been life and death situation, if that baby was cold, if that mother was postpartum.
Right, do you see they've obviously helped him to chair, wrapped it, I mean, you know, I'm sure, I'm amazed we don't get statuses.
Well, I went into the toilet and I had to flush it because somebody didn't flush and then I had to put the toilet brush around and I had to use the toilet duck.
I'm amazed.
We had to clean the toilet three times today.
I'm amazed we don't get You shouldn't have wrapped him in a blanket, it should have been a foil blanket because that's what the medical training is.
Foil blanket.
That's why we give out foil blankets to families to keep them warm.
Anybody can give them a knitted blanket.
I can give them knitted blankets all day long, but they also need a foil blanket because that is the medical recommendation.
With a hot water bottle.
It's awful, poor gentlemen's in that situation, but that is a medical emergency and that should be, and it's not the first time this has happened because they've had people sleeping out the back freezing cold and all the rest of it.
Right.
And yes, they get them in, sit them down, wrap them up, but there's no ambulance being called there at all.
If the ambulance people turn up and he turns away the ambulance when they turn up, then the onus is on the individual, isn't it?
And the ambulance people may override it and say, no, we're getting the police here and the police are going to section you and we're going to take you in because you are at risk.
And he probably was because it's blowing freezing, isn't it?
You know, poor sod out there.
Awful, isn't it?
It's awful.
These people are living on the street in these conditions.
You know, when there's enough hotels out there, the government have already proved there's enough hotels out there to house everybody.
And I mean, who's booking a hotel in the UK at the moment?
Not many people are there.
So, you know, like I said, this is the difference between having somebody run in a group, right?
It's for benefit and welfare of a community who has medical training and not just first aid training.
We have first aid training, but we're also medically trained as well.
And I mean, they've been working with a homeless long enough now.
You know, plus she's a compliance officer.
She should have known.
Is that a made up job?
Is that what her actual job was before she gave it up to have all these kids on benefits?
I don't know.
All I know is the DWP told her.
I know this because I know somebody who worked for the DWP told her that she couldn't have any more clearance allowance for any more children of her own children because they want enough hours in the week for you to be caring for the more Mrs. Thomas or Mrs. Mrs. Johnson.
I think she was But yeah, that massive red flags for me there.
Where is that gentleman now?
Because he really needs medical assistance if he's coming in that state.
He needs to be reported to 999.
He needs to see a medical professional.
You can't just wrap him in a blanket, give him an hot water bottle, give him a and send him on his way.
By law.
By law.
No, I'm not going to say so.
By law, you are accountable for him once he's come over your threshold.
And to be honest, anybody walking past this gentleman in the street is accountable for his welfare if they are at the scene of an accident or scene of a crisis by law.
I've had to go back to bed.
Not well at all.
All for stomach problems.
Anyway, it's all been investigators.
We know that.
So anyway, this has come up today and this is, you know, this is the difference between having a trained health professional on site and having people who adjust first aid trained on site.
Okay, so one of our street homeless guys turned up, so they knew him.
Freezing cold and they could hardly stand.
Now straight away, straight away to me, right, after studying nursing and other aspects of nursing, right, being a carer, being a classroom assistant, right.
Oh and I think on the Sherlock website they said classroom assistant, blah blah blah.
Yeah, well I was pre-Ian Huntley.
Yes, so pre-Ian Huntley, nobody had to register.
Nobody had to have a check pre-Ian Huntley and Maxine Carr.
It was after Maxine Carr and Ian Huntley, everybody had to be, have a rolling DBS.
Not just a DBS, a rolling one.
And by law they have to sign to say if they've got anything pending too.
So straight away to me there, right, freezing cold and could hardly stand.
I'd have been on the phone 999 ambulance, whether the client individual wanted it or not, right.
Now these people have been working with the homeless a long time, okay.
If anything happened to that man, and let's hope it doesn't, right, then they could be sued and they could go to prison, right, because they were the responsible registered charity dealing with our gentleman.
Okay, so if anything happened to that man then, tomorrow, the day after, within a reasonable amount of time, I know nurses that have been pulled in that finished their shift at six o'clock, didn't even give medication at eight o'clock and has been pulled into NMC meetings to discuss patients who died 28 days later.
So that should have been an ambulance job if he couldn't stand.
Now if that was a baby and a mother, you see how they're unqualified, you see how we are a qualified baby bank and they are an unqualified baby bank and many other baby banks are unqualified, not just this one.
Because if that was a baby that could have been life and death situation, if that baby was cold, if that mother was postpartum.
Right, do you see they've obviously helped him to chair, wrapped it, I mean, you know, I'm sure, I'm amazed we don't get statuses.
Well, I went into the toilet and I had to flush it because somebody didn't flush and then I had to put the toilet brush around and I had to use the toilet duck.
I'm amazed.
We had to clean the toilet three times today.
I'm amazed we don't get You shouldn't have wrapped him in a blanket, it should have been a foil blanket because that's what the medical training is.
Foil blanket.
That's why we give out foil blankets to families to keep them warm.
Anybody can give them a knitted blanket.
I can give them knitted blankets all day long, but they also need a foil blanket because that is the medical recommendation.
With a hot water bottle.
It's awful, poor gentlemen's in that situation, but that is a medical emergency and that should be, and it's not the first time this has happened because they've had people sleeping out the back freezing cold and all the rest of it.
Right.
And yes, they get them in, sit them down, wrap them up, but there's no ambulance being called there at all.
If the ambulance people turn up and he turns away the ambulance when they turn up, then the onus is on the individual, isn't it?
And the ambulance people may override it and say, no, we're getting the police here and the police are going to section you and we're going to take you in because you are at risk.
And he probably was because it's blowing freezing, isn't it?
You know, poor sod out there.
Awful, isn't it?
It's awful.
These people are living on the street in these conditions.
You know, when there's enough hotels out there, the government have already proved there's enough hotels out there to house everybody.
And I mean, who's booking a hotel in the UK at the moment?
Not many people are there.
So, you know, like I said, this is the difference between having somebody run in a group, right?
It's for benefit and welfare of a community who has medical training and not just first aid training.
We have first aid training, but we're also medically trained as well.
And I mean, they've been working with a homeless long enough now.
You know, plus she's a compliance officer.
She should have known.
Is that a made up job?
Is that what her actual job was before she gave it up to have all these kids on benefits?
I don't know.
All I know is the DWP told her.
I know this because I know somebody who worked for the DWP told her that she couldn't have any more clearance allowance for any more children of her own children because they want enough hours in the week for you to be caring for the more Mrs. Thomas or Mrs. Mrs. Johnson.
I think she was But yeah, that massive red flags for me there.
Where is that gentleman now?
Because he really needs medical assistance if he's coming in that state.
He needs to be reported to 999.
He needs to see a medical professional.
You can't just wrap him in a blanket, give him an hot water bottle, give him a and send him on his way.
By law.
By law.
No, I'm not going to say so.
By law, you are accountable for him once he's come over your threshold.
And to be honest, anybody walking past this gentleman in the street is accountable for his welfare if they are at the scene of an accident or scene of a crisis by law.