Hi Paolo,
I guess a typical day there wasn't very different from any other hospital.
You get there, wait for your turn and then leave when you go in for the cross-match.
If you go for transfusion, you'd need to take into account how long it will take, since
they had to shut down by 5pm. Generally, for 3 units of blood they advised you
to stay around 6 hours. The very good thing, which I loved, is that they use a small
cannula for the transfusions, so that you can wander around, eat your lunch, use the toilet
without being afraid of the needle passing through your vein.
Being European citizens, the health care is free. Of course you'll have to pay for the prescription
if you're not exempted from that. It means, you pay around £7.65 for each time you get
medicines such as Exjade, or calcium tablets, etc... that need prescription.
You don't pay for the blood.
I came back to Italy for a while and I like it here (Napoli), since I like my home town
Doctors are good and nurses as well. Unfortunately, as you know the system is slow and too ancient.
It looked much easier in the UK, even when if I had to drive for quite a while in order to reach
the hospital even for just a cross match lasting for only 5 minutes. However, a thing that I missed
in the UK was the chance to talk to a doctor more frequently (even if I didn't actually need it!).
Nevertheless, we can't have all we want.