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.

Explore more

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

From the October 12th 2024 edition

Discover stories from this section and more in the list of contents

Explore the edition

More from Britain

Crew members during the commissioning of HMS Prince of Wales

Has the Royal Navy become too timid?

A new paper examines how its culture has changed

A pedestrian walks across the town square in Stevenage

A plan to reorganise local government in England runs into opposition

Turkeys vote against Christmas


David Lammy, Britain’s foreign secretary

David Lammy’s plan to shake up Britain’s Foreign Office

Diplomats will be tasked with growing the economy and cutting migration


Britain’s government has spooked markets and riled businesses

Tax rises were inevitable. Such a shaky start was not

Labour’s credibility trap

Who can believe Rachel Reeves?