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[Politics] The NHS and funding



Wrong-Direction

Well-known member
Mar 10, 2013
13,563
I think people keep forgetting there's plenty of money floating about for great services for all. The corrupt elite keep it all to themselves though.

Sent from my SM-A600FN using Tapatalk
 




beorhthelm

A. Virgo, Football Genius
Jul 21, 2003
35,844
Now please explain why there isn’t just one medical IT system with all your records on it that you can access on an app or a website. Now that would be great progress.

concerns on security and privacy, cost to build and manage it. really it doesnt need to be one system, a framework for integration and data sharing would serve most purposes, thats not grand enough to make it to policy makers.
 


Herr Tubthumper

Well-known member
NSC Patron
Jul 11, 2003
61,904
The Fatherland
I recently attended A&E at Worthing Hospital, the short summary was that I sliced the top of my thumb off with a pair of secateurs. I am an idiot.

Anyway, the care I received was fantastic. Yes I had to wait but there were a lot of people with a more pressing need than mine.

However I came away after spending a good deal of time with a nurse all sorted, cleaned up and hopefully the thumb will be okay. I had no complaints whatsoever.

But it made me think, should I have paid for my treatment? Me being there was entirely my own fault and a quick glance round the very packed A&E department suggested at least half the people were there due to various forms of self inflicted pain, either through drugs or alcohol or gardening incidents like mine.

Had they said, well look this is your own fault, you are a nob end, this will cost you £100, I would have paid. Yes I pay my taxes, but I earn well and could afford it. Instead I have lobbed this amount into the hospital charity fund, but it made me think what would be wrong with charging a nominal sum for visits like this? We are so precious about our free NHS but the reality is there is a lot of self inflicted stuff going into the system through people not looking after themselves, being a clumsy idiot like me etc.

Should we have to pay if it's our fault? Should we start charging £10 for a doctors appointment. If it meant I could see mine on the day I wanted I'd pay for that. I'm sure others would as well.

I expect this thread will be bombarded with resistance but I genuinely think there is a large amount of people who could and would pay for such a treatment, especially if it improved the NHS as a result. Clearly I would not expect anyone on benefits to pay these amounts.

I prefer the “where can I watch the game in blah blah” look-at-me threads. This is crass.
 


drew

Drew
Oct 3, 2006
23,404
Burgess Hill
All great points well made in a balanced fashion. I shall stand down my argument on this. As said in the original post I am an idiot.

Now please explain why there isn’t just one medical IT system with all your records on it that you can access on an app or a website. Now that would be great progress.

They tried and failed, abandoned in 2013 by the Tory government!!!
 


Giraffe

VERY part time moderator
Helpful Moderator
NSC Patron
Aug 8, 2005
26,970
concerns on security and privacy, cost to build and manage it. really it doesnt need to be one system, a framework for integration and data sharing would serve most purposes, thats not grand enough to make it to policy makers.

I've heard this argument before, but it doesn't make any sense. The records exist anyway, it's just they are on different systems, none of which I can access online. Everything else is online so why can't this be? I'm sure people die because their records are not easily accessed and doctors don't know what drugs they are on?
 




Justice

Dangerous Idiot
Jun 21, 2012
20,193
Born In Shoreham
Can you imagine the rage in A&E if we all paid we are happy to wait for hours because we don’t pay directly on the day. If we did tempers would definitely start boiling over.
 


blue-shifted

Banned
Feb 20, 2004
7,645
a galaxy far far away
OP

Well done for making a donation, but if you feel you have enough money to pay for an improvement in the NHS and other public services, you'll very soon have the opportunity to cast your vote for a party which is offering better funded public services paid for through higher taxation ... (ok so they might not advertise the last part of this too much)
 








Herr Tubthumper

Well-known member
NSC Patron
Jul 11, 2003
61,904
The Fatherland
Can you imagine the rage in A&E if we all paid we are happy to wait for hours because we don’t pay directly on the day. If we did tempers would definitely start boiling over.

Maybe hospitals could introduce surge charging?
 


beorhthelm

A. Virgo, Football Genius
Jul 21, 2003
35,844
I've heard this argument before, but it doesn't make any sense. The records exist anyway, it's just they are on different systems, none of which I can access online. Everything else is online so why can't this be? I'm sure people die because their records are not easily accessed and doctors don't know what drugs they are on?

doesnt have to make sense to be the reason. NHS IT systems are horribly fragmented, along way from being able to offer access online, if they are even fully digitised (its not just UK actually, IT system in healthcare are sub par). Its different elsewhere, business can make the decision to do so themselves, not behold to one monolithic risk averse authority.
 




MattBackHome

Well-known member
Jul 7, 2003
11,836
I'm actually sympathetic to the original idea. I just reckon it should be done via progressive taxation and not at the point of service.

I also reckon they could probably do a good line in ringfenced gifts via wills etc.
 


Tom Hark Preston Park

Will Post For Cash
Jul 6, 2003
71,937
I prefer the “where can I watch the game in blah blah” look-at-me threads. This is crass.

It's a bit like that vegan thing:

Q. How do you tell if someone's a vegan?
A. They'll tell you about it soon enough

Pretty sure OP felt the absolute need to let everyone know they'd put £100 quid in the NHS kitty - if that even actually happened - so they got maximum bang for their buck. Else nobody would ever know eh? Or appreciate the virtue signalling.
 


Machiavelli

Well-known member
Oct 11, 2013
17,487
Fiveways
Charging will just increase bureaucracy and therefore also the cost of deliverying the service , something that I thought Tories and free marketeers want to reduce. The NHS is the most efficient provider of healthcare in the world, but this is something we’re not supposed to know.
 




Peteinblack

Well-known member
NSC Patron
Jun 3, 2004
4,036
Bath, Somerset.
Once the NHS starts charging even a nominal amount for an appointment or treatment, the amount will steadily increase, and eventually, some people will be unable to afford to pay.

The claim that 'the NHS is no longer affordable' is politically-motivated; it's the claim advanced by those who want to dismantle it or privatise it completely. The people who claim 'the NHS is no longer affordable' are invariably the people who are happy to give £ billions given away in tax cuts for those on high salaries, and turn a blind eye to the £ billions lost through tax evasion.

Instead of saying "we can't afford the NHS anymore", we should be saying "we can't afford £ multi-billion tax give-aways and tax fraud anymore."

However, I do think there is a problem with people who end up in hospital as a result of their own stupidity or lifestyle. Doctors already refuse to operate on some people until they quit excessive drinking, give up smoking, or lose weight, and I think that is quite reasonable.

I also think it would be reasonable not to treat the pissed-up idiots who clutter A&E on Friday & Saturday nights.
 


highflyer

Well-known member
Jan 21, 2016
2,505
My violent instinct was to announce the thread as a party political broadcast for the new Tory right. However, you explain with great clarity a proper reasoning. Good points well made.

It's the new, kinder politics :thumbsup:

Worth a try.

And also it was an interesting enough question to be worth engaging with. Universal vs means testing is an important debate.

I am in favour of Universal Basic Income, but while there is an instinctive feeling that health care should be free and available to all, regardless of circumstances, we don't seem to think the same of basic income. And I am not sure why (beyond a deep rooted adherence to the protestent work ethic, but if that is so strong why are we seemingly happy for most wealth to be accumulated on the basis of asset ownership rather than work).
 


blue-shifted

Banned
Feb 20, 2004
7,645
a galaxy far far away
I also think it would be reasonable not to treat the pissed-up idiots who clutter A&E on Friday & Saturday nights.

A good chunk of those will be people who just went for a night out and got assaulted for no reason*. That's happened to me

*well ok I could have possibly done more to defuse the situation but it was mostly not my fault
 


Peteinblack

Well-known member
NSC Patron
Jun 3, 2004
4,036
Bath, Somerset.
Charging will just increase bureaucracy and therefore also the cost of deliverying the service , something that I thought Tories and free marketeers want to reduce. The NHS is the most efficient provider of healthcare in the world, but this is something we’re not supposed to know.

Good point - the 'internal market', introduced in the early 1990s, has led to a massive increase in accountants and 'business managers' in the NHS (and other public services). Many hospitals (and universities) are now top-heavy with bureaucrats trying to manage and monitor the system, and keep tabs on the cash flows and 'cost centres' inside each institution. The amount of paperwork, documentation, and 'audit trails' this has generated is unbelievable.
 




Peteinblack

Well-known member
NSC Patron
Jun 3, 2004
4,036
Bath, Somerset.
A good chunk of those will be people who just went for a night out and got assaulted for no reason*. That's happened to me

*well ok I could have possibly done more to defuse the situation but it was mostly not my fault

I'm not referring to people who get assaulted, but the people who are taken in to a A&E because they got paralytic, and then proceed to piss or vomit over the ward or the medical staff.
 


jackanada

Well-known member
Jul 19, 2011
3,419
Brighton
I'm not referring to people who get assaulted, but the people who are taken in to a A&E because they got paralytic, and then proceed to piss or vomit over the ward or the medical staff.

Though all the duty they've paid on drink and fags tops up the Exchequer so they are contributing more.
 


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