dubairl wrote:
just an incident that happened with a cousin of mine, He had two in ingrown toe nails whilst waiting for the operation to have them removed (3months originally) they became infected no matter what he did he couldn't stop it from happening. So he got moved up the waiting list whilst not being able to work all in the mean time because he had serious troubles with walking. Two weeks before he is due the op he had a check up and they found he was a carrier of MRSA so it was another 2months before he could have the operation, so all in all 6months of not working earning less money than if he was still working in the end they had to send him to a private hospital (i think somewhere in runshaw) because the toes had become septic and he was very close to losing his 2 big toes because of the NHS. So yeah i will stick to private health care.
What the NHS does very well is priorities cases so if you are referred to a surgery for ingrowing toe nails then to be honest if its a minor case then your local GP will do them (ours did one for my daughter), if its more complicated then presumably you'll be referred but even then you won't be rushed into hospital on a blue light and seen to that very day - which you might possibly be able to arrange with a private health provider.
Are you sure he couldn't work with ingrowing toenails, was he bed-bound for all this time - I'm starting to sound like Ian Duncan Smith now.
Anyway, the extra two months tagged on at the end for MRSA are understandable and would happen whether or not he went private so he didn't really "nearly lose his big toes because of the NHS" did he - what happened was that toe nail surgery is a low priority and then he was delayed further because they didn't want him closing a whole ward with his MRSA - not really a case study for persuading me to take up the £99 a month offer from Aviva for private medical insurance.