EFCNIK
Banned
Understaffed mate. When it's got more employees than the red army we'll be on the right track.
Working on behalf of the nhs, I can tell you that understaffing isn't the main problem.
Understaffed mate. When it's got more employees than the red army we'll be on the right track.
The NHS is often terribly run. If someone else can do a better job then why not give them the chance. Why not use a voucher system, so people get x amount of free healthcare and can spend it wherever they want?
There's this idea that the NHS is perfect, when it's really not in the slightest.
Understaffed mate. When it's got more employees than the red army we'll be on the right track.
The US model isn't the only one out there. In Germany and France for instance, most healthcare is provided privately but funded publically.
I miss the NHS terribly. Paying $140 a month plus $25 each doc visit and $40 for specialists with deductibles on prescriptions, limits on care, $250 emergency visits etc isn't nice
The NHS is often terribly run. If someone else can do a better job then why not give them the chance. Why not use a voucher system, so people get x amount of free healthcare and can spend it wherever they want?
There's this idea that the NHS is perfect, when it's really not in the slightest.
Both off my parents have worked in the NHS for over a decade and the stories they tell me about the sheer incompetence is ridiculous.
The thing is, it's such a sacred cow now that it's almost political poison to even suggest it needs to be better, or heaven forbid, that someone else could do a better job.
By far the most healthcare expenditure in the west goes on the elderly, and in many developed countries, it's the elderly population that's growing massively. It's vital that we get better at this, because despite so many information products getting exponentially cheaper over the past 50 years, healthcare has become exponentially dearer.
It needs a root and branch overhaul of it all really, from the way drugs are approved for market through the patent system through health education, and of course through provision of healthcare for much less than it currently costs. Places like the Aravind Eye Hospital show what's possible.
That's a very fair point mate, I need to read up on them at some point as you seldom hear complaints about there. I thought they had socialised healthcare too ffs.
About to buy a book on the annexing of Europe by the Soviets post WWII too, which you inspired me on. Not the one you linked but a different one.
What if you get run over on your bike, and then can't afford the ongoing treatments? Or you run out of vouchers!
Preventative healthcare would be the way forward. Drugs are costly, and we have a culture of simply letting people get sick and then facilitating their sickness by pumping them full of drugs. That's what cripples healthcare, it's peoples lifestyles and diets.
There is genuinely nothing worse than being on a ward, at a weekend / bank holiday.. And getting an agency / stand in nurse looking after you. Poor English and sometimes even poorer diagnosis.
I still stand by how good most are however.. I had issues with a Polish Sister once, but once we cleared the air it was sound. As for the incompetence, there is money wasted everywhere..
I read something the other day about someone being kept waiting a few weeks for a hip operation. I'm now convinced the NHS should be fully privatised, and vouchers given out to everyone. The profit taken out by private providers will lead to better service, and it will stop us healthy people subsidising fat bastards with dodgy tickers etc
I miss the NHS terribly. Paying $140 a month plus $25 each doc visit and $40 for specialists with deductibles on prescriptions, limits on care, $250 emergency visits etc isn't nice