There is a lack of water and a lack of blood. We all know that. And yet there are still many who do not turn off the tap while brushing their teeth. They continue to put half-empty dishwashers and the bathtub full every day. Or that they are scandalized by the restrictions on showers in gyms, but they are disappointed or they don’t even know about the loss of 24% of Catalan drinking water in those eternal leaks that are only half-faced when the drought becomes serious. I wonder how many times the obscene dry image of the Sau reservoir church could have been covered with the 180,000 liters a day that have been lost in the Canyet stream in Badalona for 19 years and that will continue to spill until 2027.
But nothing. Whether you turn off the tap or not, you will see that your bills cover fees, sewage rates, municipal waste, treatment and little, but very expensive, water. Incomprehensible. It’s an unfunny joke like those empty tests that thousands of patients have received, that we now know that our samples were thrown away, hopefully in the trash and not in the toilet or to avoid wasting more water.
Although it was not to cover the red alert of the donor banks that have also had years of unbearable drought, and it was only blood for tests described as not unpostponable, throwing away blood does not seem reasonable. No matter how much the reasons that drive health technicians to act like this are too many years out of date, it is intolerable to send phantom reports and the shock of the patient being pricked for nothing in the face of so much zero. And it is even more intolerable that some have no choice but to stop trusting the CAPs, when they cannot do so in those mutual societies that welcome young people with open arms, but without compassion or brakes raise their fees to their patients to as they become more senior. Like the water thing. Pay more for less. In the mutual insurance companies no longer for getting sick. Just to get older.