All that is left of the weekend’s Carnival

Because, as we learnt long ago, The Carnival Is Over.
Passing clouds of inconsequential observations
All that is left of the weekend’s Carnival

Because, as we learnt long ago, The Carnival Is Over.
Back in June I happened to read through some unimportant looking mail before it was dropped in the recycling. It informed me that an NHS appointment had been made for me on Saturday July 12th. Why and by whom was a mystery. It certainly was not me. There has been much made lately of the cost to the NHS of missed appointments – some (make up a number) millions/billions of pounds. Perhaps they are missed because people are unaware that they exist.
Fortunately today we can rely on technology to save us. It was a simple matter to cancel my appointment via the services of Accurx and their “easy-to-use platform where patients and healthcare professionals communicate“.
Alas communicating the cancellation did not progress any further than the Accurx box ticking exercise. Two text messages arrived, on the Wednesday and Friday, reminding me of the pending appointment. On the evening of the 12th a lady called to ask why I had not attended. I explained I had cancelled the appointment and she apologised in a manner that suggested this was a frequent occurrence.
This failure came as no surprise to me. In the past I have been advised about the results of a blood test – for someone else. I have been invited to partake in some research – for which I did not qualify.
My experience seems to be a common one given all the one star reviews for Accurx. Although medical professionals seem to love it.
The Accurx Principles are hosted on a Notion site (Notion being some ‘AI’ nonsense) and is full of the vacuous drivel one would expect: “If we disagree, we commit and champion”.
Looking into who these people are we sink into the dark and depressing waters that is the gradual privatisation of the health service. Early investors seem to be Conservative MP Tom Tugendhat and Atomico making Irina Haivas – “My passions remain rooted in deeply disruptive technologies, the people who drive them and the opportunity to create meaningful impact at scale — especially in Europe.” a director until she left Atomico in 2025. Laurence Bargery, a co-founder of Accurx, has moved on to Healthtech 1; a UK division of the American corporation Healthtech X.
Accurx, despite having millions invested, have yet to make any money. Of course making money is not the objective. With the whole world (and beyond) becoming little more than a playground for billionaires just getting a foot in the door is enough for now. Keep Our NHS Public maintains a database that catalogues the millions of pounds we pour into these private companies.
While they are busy innovating and disrupting we are left paying for an increasingly inefficient and ineffective health service.
The latest splendid offering from SoundDust is called Plato. It comes with some Plato sounding quotes, all unsourced, and, as is the way of such things, many probably not found in Plato’s works. But there is no harm in repeating a good thing…
The map by Sophie Stone records places you have lived or visited in the UK. This is mine:
Despite my names Scotland and Ireland remain mostly untouched. Curiously Apple’s Safari browser offered to translate the text into English. This merely changed pts to points and broke the layout.