I used to have private cover for a number of years. Mine didn’t eliminate the need to see my local GP first and foremost.I will watch it. I must say that one of the most frustrating things about the current election campaign is the inability of all parties to admit that the NHS cannot recruit enough doctors and nurses nor build enough hospitals, train enough GPs even if there were a magic money tree, to keep up with the demands of an older and sicker population and that's without talking about social care.
I know the system is under invested in compared to the rest of Europe but lets be realistic about what it can deliver even with more cash and put more focus onto improving the food environment that is producing so much preventable disease.
In the meantime people like my husband are opting out of the NHS because he gets private cover through work for the treatment of non acute conditions and we already have a 2 tier system but yet it could get a lot worse if we put 3rd parties in the middle of the patients and the state.
I agree that my husband will go in for the GP in order to refer him to a consultant who is probably also running an NHS clinic with a much longer queue.I used to have private cover for a number of years. Mine didn’t eliminate the need to see my local GP first and foremost.
I used it a few times after referral on each occasion. However since redundancy from that company in 2010 that benefit is no longer paid for by that employer.
Interestingly the IOM has mimicked it. Theirs is not financed via the UK government but through the Manx Treasury. I did notice a discernible difference between the two but I am not sure if that is reflected in the level of money pumped into the IOM NHS.As previously stated, the NHS is greatly underfunded. The problem is though, that most people think that “someone else” should pay for this. I think that we should all be prepared to pay more to provide the services we require.
After all, if the the NHS is such a great model, why hasn’t any other country copied it for their citizens?
I am truly grateful for all the assistance I have received, but I am aware that it’s in crisis and we need to do something right now!
the NHS is greatly underfunded
I think that comparitively speaking and compariing it to other state providers or the US (highest spend but 37th in health outomes) it would seem that the NHS is underfunded but it would be impossible to restore that funding yet keep up with the increasing demands placed on it (running to stay still). Doubtless there is waste too e.g. bed blocking due to lack of social care yet it is hard to think of a better way to do it other than perhaps giving a health allowance to all citizens which can be used to pay for doctor visits. Fund cold build up over time so as to incentivise best lifestyle choices and give the consumer real choice so that better doctors who get good results are encouraged. Yes I know this is way too radical for most and wold be an electric rail in the current environment where the NHS is a a sacred thing.....Is it.. really? £126 billion is about £4k for every taxpayer in the country.
Sometimes I think we really need to have a big grown up conversation as a nation to assess exactly what we expect the NHS to provide for free. I spent a lot of time in hospitals this year visiting my sick mother and the waste was huge. Every single piece of equipment was used once and thrown away, everything was wrapped in plastic. The food waste was a disgrace - I'd guess that a good 80% was ditched. This goes on every single day.
I don't mix in circles where the running and workings of the NHS is held too sacred to criticise or discuss objectively.
I think you neither know me or my circles.I think you do.. we see it every day with the "Our NHS" mantra.. absolutely everywhere
The food / waste is a disgrace. I agree. Maybe the cost of sterilising the equipment for re-use is quite high and not worth it?Is it.. really? £126 billion is about £4k for every taxpayer in the country.
Sometimes I think we really need to have a big grown up conversation as a nation to assess exactly what we expect the NHS to provide for free. I spent a lot of time in hospitals this year visiting my sick mother and the waste was huge. Every single piece of equipment was used once and thrown away, everything was wrapped in plastic. The food waste was a disgrace - I'd guess that a good 80% was ditched. This goes on every single day.
I was a out patient at the local public hospital's wound dressing clinic for around four months.Sometimes I think we really need to have a big grown up conversation as a nation to assess exactly what we expect the NHS to provide for free. I spent a lot of time in hospitals this year visiting my sick mother and the waste was huge. Every single piece of equipment was used once and thrown away, everything was wrapped in plastic. The food waste was a disgrace - I'd guess that a good 80% was ditched. This goes on every single day.
Completely mad isn't it..I was a out patient at the local public hospital's wound dressing clinic for around four months.
I collected all of the scissors and tweezers that the staff used either picking up a dressing or cutting a length of tubular stocking on me and brought them home. I asked about the wastage and they told me it was more cost effective to throw them out than it was to clean and sterilise them for reuse.
They all found good homes when I shared them with my fishing mates.
I tried my hardest to get a pair of those long handled scissors / shears that they had there, the only chance I had of getting a pair was when the Doctor that was treating me at the clinic dumped them in the bin unused after doing a biopsy on my leg and missed out.Completely mad isn't it..
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