Dave the OAP
Well-known member
How do you that mate?Fill the 130,000+ vacancies in the NHS and then have a discussion about whether it’s fit for purpose or not.
How do you that mate?Fill the 130,000+ vacancies in the NHS and then have a discussion about whether it’s fit for purpose or not.
A most intelligent and reasoned response and how do you know I am in a minority?You are of course profoundly wrong but, fortunately, you're in a very small minority.
I don’t know but to say the NHS isn’t fit for purpose when they have that amount of FTE vacancies seems strange to me. You could train them for free again, remove the need for a full degree, rejoin the EU. My wife is a community nurse and there used to be 8/9 FTE staff nurses there covering the area. There’s now 3 on a normal day.How do you that mate?
Because I follow things like opinion polls -- see below.A most intelligent and reasoned response and how do you know I am in a minority?
The US system is utterly bizarre. Last time I looked they spend twice as much per capita BUT as only a subset of the population has proper access to healthcare it can be argued this is an underestimation. Where do the dollars go?Because I follow things like opinion polls -- see below.
I also say you're profoundly wrong, because I also follow things like how much other countries spend on healthcare, and what their results are like. You could always privatise healthcare -- largely what they have in the US -- spend nearly twice as much, and get largely worse results. That's the 'efficient' private sector for you.
NHS Poll Jan 2022
www.electoralcalculus.co.uk
Many people are left standing up until they die.Whatever you argue, no one is going to convince me that the NHS should be dismantled and a private healthcare system be bought in. I’m proud of our NHS and will stand up for it until I die
Because I follow things like opinion polls -- see below.
I also say you're profoundly wrong, because I also follow things like how much other countries spend on healthcare, and what their results are like. You could always privatise healthcare -- largely what they have in the US -- spend nearly twice as much, and get largely worse results. That's the 'efficient' private sector for you.
NHS Poll Jan 2022
www.electoralcalculus.co.uk
labour costs, fees for professional services and full rate for drugs (even generics are relatively expensive). there's a lot of elective procedure and prescriptions we'd not have in Europe. also liability insurance, a nice circular feedback (healthcare cost more, insurance goes up, making healthcare go up). when you dig into numbers a surprising amount is not as private as we imagine, there are state and county/city level services, army, government agencies offering free or subsidied health services. but they all still pay the going rate for a Dr, nursing care, warfarin etc.The US system is utterly bizarre. Last time I looked they spend twice as much per capita BUT as only a subset of the population has proper access to healthcare it can be argued this is an underestimation. Where do the dollars go?
Because its a simplistic, strawman, politically motivated way to frame the argument.Who has asked for a US like system? Why is it always the Current version we have or the US system as if there is nothing in between?
People always trot out the example of US private healthcare which is an extreme example. Here in Oz the public and private sectors work hand in hand. If you have need of treatment that is non urgent you have two choices, join the queue by going public or jump to the front by paying through the nose for it. By going private you also get to choose your consultant, stay in a nicer hospital, etc etc. If you have need of treatment for life changing/threatening conditions then public/private makes no difference in your speed of treatment. I have needed to use the public system frequently over the last year or two and can pay testament to a healthcare regime which is light years ahead of what I both recall, and have heard, about the NHS recently. Scans for instance, what kind, how many, when would you like them etc etc?Because I follow things like opinion polls -- see below.
I also say you're profoundly wrong, because I also follow things like how much other countries spend on healthcare, and what their results are like. You could always privatise healthcare -- largely what they have in the US -- spend nearly twice as much, and get largely worse results. That's the 'efficient' private sector for you.
NHS Poll Jan 2022
www.electoralcalculus.co.uk
The healthcare over here is well funded. It really is as simple as that.People always trot out the example of US private healthcare which is an extreme example. Here in Oz the public and private sectors work hand in hand. If you have need of treatment that is non urgent you have two choices, join the queue by going public or jump to the front by paying through the nose for it. By going private you also get to choose your consultant, stay in a nicer hospital, etc etc. If you have need of treatment for life changing/threatening conditions then public/private makes no difference in your speed of treatment. I have needed to use the public system frequently over the last year or two and can pay testament to a healthcare regime which is light years ahead of what I both recall, and have heard, about the NHS recently. Scans for instance, what kind, how many, when would you like them etc etc?
The NHS needs radical reform in my view, not tinkering at the edges. You can get a GP appointment here quite easily in the next few days, in the short term you may need to pay but the majority is refunded to you in the medium term. Unless you want the latest celebrity doctor of course! This deters the time wasters who take up appointments for no good reason, if people really are unable to pay then they can go to a clinic operating on a free at point of contact basis but may have to wait a little longer. If urgent then there is the emergency department at local hospitals.
Healthcare is taken very seriously over here, some Aussies may moan that it ain’t perfect but they have not experienced the NHS. For those defending the status quo in UK healthcare you are nuts, look at the Covid figures for UK v Aus. Different policies of management I grant you, but a lack of temporary hospitals over here, most other urgent medical procedures carried on as per, and the mortality rates of the virus too. So yes, lower level healthcare staff need better wages, but the NHS is not admired all over the world anymore, it really is still living on former glories, and is still stuck in the 20th century.
Perhaps you should re read my post. Where did I suggest privatisation? I was suggesting (trying to at least, but you clearly don't do 'debate') that we need an open, non politicised debate as to what the nhs should be delivering and how we pay for it. I will be very surprised if you can show me a poll that say the majority of people are opposed to that but if you can then please post it here.Because I follow things like opinion polls -- see below.
I also say you're profoundly wrong, because I also follow things like how much other countries spend on healthcare, and what their results are like. You could always privatise healthcare -- largely what they have in the US -- spend nearly twice as much, and get largely worse results. That's the 'efficient' private sector for you.
NHS Poll Jan 2022
www.electoralcalculus.co.uk
Wishful thinking, the tories have alienated and disgusted too many people this time. Everyone involved knows that this strike will define the following eraI don’t agree with some of the way this is going from the side of the unions, but this is ridiculous.
From what I saw a couple of years ago with the crew at BA/Virgin - when it came to the push the unions were pretty useless, I can see this ending in the same sort of way with people braking rank and signing a new deal against the unions wish.
Wwishful
Wishful thinking, the tories have alienated and disgusted too many people this time. Everyone involved knows that this strike will define the following era
If you think people have been ‘defending the status quo in UK healthcare’ on this thread then you clearly havent been reading the whole thread nor following the UK news!For those defending the status quo in UK healthcare you are nuts,
You're forgetting this is the NHS, and many, many people have lost love ones prematurely as a direct result of Tory policy. We shall see how the people feel, soon enoughNot sure, how many people vowed never to use P&O , BA etc etc after they way they treated staff.
Most people have already forgotten.
Excuse my ignorance, but how can a generic be more expensive in the US?labour costs, fees for professional services and full rate for drugs (even generics are relatively expensive). there's a lot of elective procedure and prescriptions we'd not have in Europe. also liability insurance, a nice circular feedback (healthcare cost more, insurance goes up, making healthcare go up). when you dig into numbers a surprising amount is not as private as we imagine, there are state and county/city level services, army, government agencies offering free or subsidied health services. but they all still pay the going rate for a Dr, nursing care, warfarin etc.