Meet Helen Crowther…
What do you love about your job?
I love the fact that I’m part of a team. Here in Weston, we’re quite a small hospital and so we’re all on first name terms with the porters, security staff, housekeeping team there. We’re all working towards the greater good together and that’s what I like about it. I like the fact it’s small and we all know each other.
What are the challenges?
One of the challenges from being a small hospital is that we don’t have all the specialties on site, and sometimes we have to manage our patients for longer or more in depth than other bigger hospitals would have to. But actually, conversely, that’s something that I quite enjoy taking a bit more of an extended role in patient journeys.
Why do you love living in Weston?
I like the situation of the hospital, where it is. It’s very easy to commute to from Bristol. It’s in a nice geographical location. There’s lots to do here. There are lots of sporty things. As a team, we go out and do the challenge of run the Christmas cracker on the beach and it’s is a pretty place to work.
What advice would you give to prospective employees?
I would say come and have a look. Come and have a look at the hospital and experience it. Because until you’re in it, you won’t really understand what it is that is so great about UHBW and the fact that we’re small. We all get on and we’re working as a team together.
So I would just say, you need to come here and see us.
About the role…
You could also work in other settings such as minor injuries units, at major events or in regional trauma networks. It’s a 24/7 service so you’ll work shifts including evenings and weekends.
There is no such thing as a typical day, which is why emergency medicine is so interesting. You’ll see people of all ages and from all walks of life, including casualties from road traffic accidents, older people without support and substance abusers. You could go from treating someone with a broken bone to caring for a patient in cardiac arrest, or dealing with a person with mental health issues.
Emergency medicine allows you to use a huge range of clinical skills to assess and prioritise patients. It means you keep good knowledge of most specialities as you work with the team to plan treatment, save lives and help patients recover. About a fifth of patients are admitted to hospital so you build expert understanding of hospital emergency medical systems.