I used to assume so, but these things tend to be done by stealth.Said this before, it would be a very brave (and foolish) PM & government that tried to privatise the NHS entirely, the repercussions would be enormous and everlasting IMHO.
I think some of our NHS is good but some of that may be due to fact that private insurance schemes do take some of the...
You usually find that making a claim on any insurance policy immediately invalidates itThe best thing about the NHS compared to medical insurance is that the cost to the consumer does not depend on risk. What are the chances of getting private medical insurance to cover you for a heart attack, at an affordable price, if you have had a heart attack before?
I had private healthcare paid for by my employer for many years without ever using it. At 64 it cost them about £600 a year, at 65 it jumped to £1,800 as I was deemed a bigger risk being older. So just when you need insurance you can't afford it.
It will save lives if 22 million Americans get to keep their healthcare. Interesting to see what happens.Except that is now in disarray also.
I think peoples different experiences of the NHS is dependent on which PCT you happen to be in. This fact in itself should be an inkling that it is not a NATIONAL health service any longer and hasn't been since the DOH started giving individual trusts their own budget to manage. When we had the National health service in true form the care would be the same wherever you were in the country and now it is not as it depends on how each trust decides to allocate the budget for different things and which services they decide to buy. The NHS has been gradually getting privatised for so many years now that it should probably be renamed as NATIONAL it is not.We know that there are problems with the NHS, largely due to financial constraints, but the staff are in the main dedicated and caring people. I'm glad we don't have the US system where a third of the population can't afford healthcare. But that is what our Government want to move towards, a privatised profit making business.
I think that is true. It will become increasing fragmented in the care that it offers.I think peoples different experiences of the NHS is dependent on which PCT you happen to be in. This fact in itself should be an inkling that it is not a NATIONAL health service any longer and hasn't been since the DOH started giving individual trusts their own budget to manage. When we had the National health service in true form the care would be the same wherever you were in the country and now it is not as it depends on how each trust decides to allocate the budget for different things and which services they decide to buy. The NHS has been gradually getting privatised for so many years now that it should probably be renamed as NATIONAL it is not.
Interesting article by George Monbiot in the Guardian. I picked it up today but it maybe a few days old. Offtopic and slightly not to most peoples taste so I will not look for link. I think you may find it informative though.I used to assume so, but these things tend to be done by stealth.
Yes. Beware when you hear administrators talking about customers and NOT patients.Things have moved on since PCT's.... CCG's are so different and people do not realise that each CCG is able to differentiate and make up different rules and availability of drugs and meds.
We had it for years with some being able to get pumps fairly easy and some having to fight.
But it even comes down to drugs. I need lidocaine patches for pain on chest from being thin and eadiotherapy and muscle damage from 1st mastectomy. Some CCGs fund and mine doesnt. I have to pay £109 for 30 days if I buy through Lloyds.
Then you have healthwatch as a business ... really??? What do they really do? Some of their annual reports are dire to read for actual achievements.. again who funds Healthwatch?
Meds, care, NHS etc is just a business being pretty poorly managed with top heavy management.. everybody needs it at some point and it is just a business...
Yes. Crippling health care costs in the US and here too before the NHS. David Blanchflower tweeted earlier "30 million got health insurance under Obamacare & these heartless evil GOP want to take it away from them...just heard a GOP congressman doctor say that people do not have a right to health care even though he has it - seems evil to me". Sums up the attitude.Interesting article by George Monbiot in the Guardian. I picked it up today but it maybe a few days old. Offtopic and slightly not to most peoples taste so I will not look for link. I think you may find it informative though.
Back to healthcare with the American slant. My sister in law was American and died of cancer nearly 2 years after diagnosis. They were fortunate in that it was covered by the insurance policies. They both worked and how the policies interacted I cannot say. Suffice to say the cost of treatment exceeded the cover so they lost the house. They had two young children at the time so there was some rule that stopped whoever taking the property but it ended up very heavily mortgaged. In the end he had to hand the keys to the mortgage company and walk away with nothing.
Just like I said. Its a postcode lottery. To this extent the NHS ias already privatized. I am so sorry that you can't get the care you need. Yes there are too many BUSINESSES involved already. The whole thing needs to be re nationalised in my opinion then we would all get the same care regardless of CCG's Its a national scandal not a national health service. As for top heavy management you have hit the nail on the head. I do not think that throwing money at the NHS will ever be effective as it all seems to go to the finance departments of hospitals and never reaches the front line of patient care. The whole business of how it is run needs to be reorganized starting with slicing off the fat cats at the topThings have moved on since PCT's.... CCG's are so different and people do not realise that each CCG is able to differentiate and make up different rules and availability of drugs and meds.
We had it for years with some being able to get pumps fairly easy and some having to fight.
But it even comes down to drugs. I need lidocaine patches for pain on chest from being thin and eadiotherapy and muscle damage from 1st mastectomy. Some CCGs fund and mine doesnt. I have to pay £109 for 30 days if I buy through Lloyds.
Then you have healthwatch as a business ... really??? What do they really do? Some of their annual reports are dire to read for actual achievements.. again who funds Healthwatch?
Meds, care, NHS etc is just a business being pretty poorly managed with top heavy management.. everybody needs it at some point and it is just a business...
I can understand new computers new computer=new operating system=better malware protection.For those of you for whom it is working I am pleased for you. That is how it should work and it would be nice if it did that nationally. In my area the hospital got a cash injection and a senior doctor told me that the offices all had new computers and carpets although there was not much difference in his workload or waiting list. My own area does not instill me with faith
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