have had to turn this of - horrendous but not surprising. I trained as nurse in the 1980s and as a new student nurse in 1985 remember patienst with MRSA being identified with a "MRSA" stamp on their notes - and a doctor who didn't believe in all that coming along and crossing it off.
I remember the wards being much cleaner until the cleaning services were privatised and as far as I can see it's all gone downhill ever since.
I can remember being a nurse on an elderly care ward with 5 nurses (including me) to provide total care for 30 patients. Was there a cleaner on the ward at all times - no. Did that mean that sometimes things went awry - yes.
Recently I went back to the ward I worked on - an elderly relative was there. One of the nursing assistants there remembered me and just said "it's dreadful". Never enough staff, they are always changing - nobody wants to work on the elderly care wards"
Just awful.
On a more positive note, when I was in hospital 18 months ago for an op the room I was in could not have been cleaner - cleaners came in every day and as far as I could see they were always cleaning. So it's not the same everywhere. I suspect that the wards which are most under pressure to provide total care suffer the most. Others where the patients are mostly self-caring have nurses with enough time to support the cleaners.