Saddened! wrote:
Why be negative about it before it's happened? The NHS is an organisation wrought with inefficiency and is genuinely failing a lot of people. It provides a decent level of care for most, which when you consider most who use it don't contribute anything like what it cost to treat them we can't really complain.
One assumes a private run hospital would still be subject to the same standard checks and SLAs normal hospitals are bound to.
If we actually want to improve medical care in this country, investment is the only way to do it. Given the perilous state of public finances across the globe, it's hard to see where that is going to come from if not private investment. Personally I'd advocate a two tier system. A basic level of care for people who don't contribute financially to their care and a second tier health insurance style scheme with proper investment in cutting edge care.
I'm a diabetic and no doubt a massive burden on the NHS. I wouldn't have any objection to contributing more.
I'm opposed to any two-tier scheme.
My moral and political stance is that ALL are entitled to the same level of care.
Being richer should not mean being able to purchase better healthcare.
By all means allow richer people to buy extra comforts like a private room or whatever but not better healthcare.
Even at the moment, the same specialists spend more time per private patient than they do per NHS patient ... and that, to my mind, is morally wrong.
If healthcare can be improved, then improve it for all.
Without clear numbers, I can't accept that the NHS is any less cost-effective than the same healthcare provision plus insurance bureaucracy plus private insurance company profit ... add to that the restrictions that insurance companies will ( and do already) place on who they will insure and how many times they can be treated in a year and the way they avoid chronic conditions and avoid existing conditions ... etc etc.
The NHS is brilliant
precisely because it is run for the public good and not run by an insurance company.