notafanofsugar
Well-Known Member
- Messages
- 248
- Location
- Shrewsbury
- Type of diabetes
- Type 1
- Treatment type
- Insulin
- Dislikes
- everything good for me! getting better though x
Isn’t that what higher taxes for the higher earners already does (or is designed to do at least)? I guess it depends what that threshold is and what care remains free.I saw on the bbc this morning that in Scotland they are considering asking people who earn over a certain threshold to contribute to their care.
On one hand I agree that it’s a good idea because of costs, resources and the strain the nhs has but on the other hand I think the nhs should be free as it’s the most wonderful health service in the world. Thoughts?
I would love to know in what broadsheet newspaper (or where online) you read that a family unit consisting of a mother, father and children receives benefits in the United Kingdom (which the OECD has stated as one of the least generous benefits systems in the entire world) totalling £84,000 in aggregate. Which amouny is just shy of what an elected member of the UK Parliament earns.Hmm. Yes sounds good...but the same people are being asked to pay more and more.
This doesn't affect me, but if one partner earns more than £50k-£60k a year then family allowance is taken away, even if the other partner stays at home to care for the children.
When I was a stay at home mum, my years of staying home and receiving family allowance counted as NI payments towards my pension. By staying home I supported my elderly parents and also working muns when they needed soneone to take their kids to school etc. Why should someone who wants to make the same choices as me be penalised twice, by not getting the family allowance and also not getting pension credits? And now it could be a 3rd time by paying directly to the NHS?
On the other hand, last week I read of a family receiving £84k in benefits? I know this is a rare case but shouldn't benefits be treated in the same way as salary? i.e. no family allowance, no pension credits and tax payable at 40%
If the level for high earners is set really high then these people would probably pay privately for most health care anyway.
I would love to know in what broadsheet newspaper (or where online) you read that a family unit consisting of a mother, father and children receives benefits in the United Kingdom (which the OECD has stated as one of the least generous benefits systems in the entire world) totalling £84,000 in aggregate. Which amouny is just shy of what an elected member of the UK Parliament earns.
I listened to the same reports on BBC Radio 4's Today Programme this morning.I saw on the bbc this morning that in Scotland they are considering asking people who earn over a certain threshold to contribute to their care.
On one hand I agree that it’s a good idea because of costs, resources and the strain the nhs has but on the other hand I think the nhs should be free as it’s the most wonderful health service in the world. Thoughts?
I agree wholeheartedly, except for one thing. All my life I have been supported by the NHS outstandingly. In my twenties my father suggested I signed up to BUPA. "What for? As a diabetic I have a queue-barging talisman and I am looked after by one of the finest hospitals in the country. It;s not as though the medics are superior, they go to the same training hospitals as anybody else!" My father must have paid thousands into the private scheme, only to be seriously let down when he needed it most. I cannot print what I think of them!It's great if you can afford private sector, but the truth is, if you can't you should be grateful for the NHS services you do get.
Thank you. I'm pleased you included at least one broadsheet.Couple on £84,000-a-year benefits let girl sleep covered in poo next to dead dog
Christopher Bennett and Gemma Brogan were jailed for neglecting seven children kept with 36 dogs in 'shocking and repugnant conditions'.metro.co.uk Squalor family on £84,000-a-year benefits shows welfare system is bust
The scene that greeted the police when they arrived at the Eastbourne flat was one of unimaginable squalor.www.express.co.uk Couple paid £7,000 a month in benefits left children living in filth with 35 dogs
Gemma Brogan and Christopher Bennett jailed for six years each following ‘dreadful example of child neglect’ during lockdownwww.telegraph.co.uk
I have had battles, misdiagnosis, but that wasn't the care or lack of appointments, seeing specialists etc. With my medical history it's ignorance of what was exactly happening to me. I think I have been fortunate in many respects, but with others, the decline in services has been drastic. Not only with private, something like going to see a specialist through referral through NHS, then being told that there is a long wait, and advised to go private and finding themselves that the specialist doing the surgery is the same one. I have had three cancer scans, all benign, but the stories of some women is frightening.I agree wholeheartedly, except for one thing. All my life I have been supported by the NHS outstandingly. In my twenties my father suggested I signed up to BUPA. "What for? As a diabetic I have a queue-barging talisman and I am looked after by one of the finest hospitals in the country. It;s not as though the medics are superior, they go to the same training hospitals as anybody else!" My father must have paid thousands into the private scheme, only to be seriously let down when he needed it most. I cannot print what I think of them!
You forgot the tea and biscuits - don’t forget the tea and biscuitsIt's a myth to think private medicine is better than NHS. It's quicker and the rooms are nicer, but that's all.
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