It isn't the way it is paid for that is the problem. It is the way it has evolved, with bean counters and bean counting and 1970s style workplace behaviour in parts of it.Me, even as a bit of a pinko I don't thin it's fit for purpose. It's designed for 70 years ago and seems to be stuffed full of people covering for themselves at the top level, with allegations of bullying and incompetence rife.
The US is worse though.
A good midway would be a system similar to The Netherlands or France which both require medical insurance as mandatory, but this is normally covered by an employer and cannot just be cancelled by the insurer. Care is free at the point of need with insurers covering most bills.
There would need to be a think about how to treat the homeless and digitally disenfranchised but the schemes tend to work in both countries.
As for getting rid of administrators that isn't a panacea, because you don't want Drs and Nurses spending all day filling in forms and arranging admin, you want them treating people. But I reckon there's definitely overspending on inefficiencies and a full audit should be done on expenses polices and how much is being spent on diversity and inclusion.
I would also make it illegal for Physician Associates to take GP appointments.
As a pinko myself, I 'support' the NHS as a concept, but it needs to be fixed or it will become even more of a money pit, with even slower and more hit and miss service. However I have no idea how it can be fixed without sacking vast numbers of people and parachuting in brand new stripped down rubrics.
My office is on a research floor in a big London teaching hospital. My experience over the last 35 years exemplifies the problems and explains why I fear the problems can't easily be fixed. I will explain in a separate post.
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