HalfaSeatOn
Well-known member
I think where I was at was that the delay of calling off health care to 80 rather than 50 would help protect a certain level of demand on the nhs and save money for 30 years. It would not eliminate the inevitable demand ‘down the road’ as you point out. I could see a 2090 equivalent to your 1890 outcome being ready acceptance of euthanasia. This is depressing for a Friday. I think I’ll move to the ‘what’s the best song….’ threadYes but delaying morbidity is simply kicking the can down the road and shifting the age of the patient when they become a healtcare burden from their 50s to their 80s. Great for the individual as they live longer, but no cost saving to the NHS. Removing type 2 diabetics (for example) from the health service may largely keep more people alive longer but they will pop up later in the health system with prostate cancer, arthritis, COPD, heart failure and cancer. The problem is that in the long run we are all dead, and unless it is by a sudden and swift stroke or MI, there will be a costly interlude between the end of good health and the appearance of death. I may be exaggerating this but I have seen an increase in 'diseases of age' over the last 40 years as general health (and wealth) has increased, so it has become an issue when it wasn't an issue 50 years ago. My uni created a center for age related diseases 20 years ago. So the removal of type 2 diabetes (etc.) may give an illusion of less strain on the NHS, but if the result is an increase in other types of diseases 20 years later then the financial and logistic burden will be unchanged. Swings and roundabouts. Ironically the health care costs would fall greatly if we went back to the 1890s where it was common for mother and child to not make it through childbirth. Neither would go on to develop chronic illnesses later in life presenting a cost burden to the health system, whatever it may be.