Trajal
Bluelighter
Err, I'm a massive capitalist (and libertarian) but I have to take issue here. Private Healthcare, by its very essence of existence, is means tested. If you can't afford it, you don't get it.
That’s not means tested! Means tested is saying to poor people, you can’t have private healthcare. Poor people CAN have private healthcare! Maybe it costs a months earning for treatment, maybe they need a loan, doesn’t matter they still have access to it. Get it?!Err, I'm a massive capitalist (and libertarian) but I have to take issue here. Private Healthcare, by its very essence of existence, is means tested. If you can't afford it, you don't get it.
It looks like you swallowed a book on economic modeling and theory without actually testing it for proof.
If your proof is based on an assumption about private healthcare in the UK, then it's flawed because we don't truly have a private system. We have a parasitic private adjunct to the NHS that provides no emergency care (there are no private A&Es because they aren't profitable), borrows (at great cost to taxpayers) most of its workforce from the NHS, and that cherry-picks profitable services while handing any procedure that would prove costly back onto the NHS. Private providers don't even pay to train nurses or doctors, the NHS does, then BUPA or whoever nabs them after. Pure parasitism.
As for the idea of competition in healthcare: lol. Healthcare isn't a market with simplistic inputs outputs and processes where one supplier undercuts another. If I sell you cheap tainted blood, cut corners not fixing you up after an operation, or insert a dodgy but cheaper replacement joint, you may simply die. Hence the realisation 70+ years ago that profit and traditional market 'competition' have no place in healthcare or in improving the provision of those services.
Just thought you might need a reminder.Nye Bevan said:Illness is not an indulgence for which people have to pay, nor an offence for which they should be penalised; but a misfortune, the cost of which should be borne by the community.
I'm becoming used to holding unpopular views; at the end of the day I am a right wing ethnic minority that works for the NHS so its automatically assumed that I am left wing or a labour luvvie. But Julie, I am sick and tired of paying large amounts of tax so that immigrants that hate the west can come and get free treatment and then bomb us. My parents were immigrants too came over int he 70s with a skill and intergrated, and never attached the country.
"People are still routinely waiting for – well, we don't really know, but certainly more than 18 weeks, possibly up to two years, for their treatment and that is routine in some parts of the country. Some children aren't getting any treatment at all – literally none. That's what's happening. So although we have the aspiration, the gap is now so big and yet there is no more money," he said.
Wessely said there would be a public outcry if those who went without treatment were cancer patients rather than people with mental health problems. Imagine, he told the Guardian, the reaction if he gave a talk that began: "'So, we have a problem in cancer service at the moment. Only 30% of people with cancer are getting treatment, so 70% of them don't get any treatment for their cancer at all and it's not even recognised."
If he were truly talking about cancer, he said, "you'd be absolutely appalled and you would be screaming from the rooftops."Wessely said he had asked Simon Stevens, the NHS England chief executive, how the gap would be bridged but was told that resolving the issue would involve a "much longer conversation with the public".
"I think what he means is basically, if people really want true parity in the sense of actual 90% of mental health patients treated within 18 weeks, just like they are for other disorders, that is going to have to mean money will have to move from acute to mental health. Genuine money.
"As there is no more money, that would mean significant losses in other sectors. I think he was saying we would need a pretty good political imperative – we would need to know that people were actually on board for that – and I don't know the answer."
I'm becoming used to holding unpopular views; at the end of the day I am a right wing ethnic minority that works for the NHS so its automatically assumed that I am left wing or a labour luvvie.
It seems like no-one (aoaprt from my self) feels comfortable to deny treatment to someone who has never paid tax, or contributed in anyway.
But Julie, I am sick and tired of paying large amounts of tax so that immigrants that hate the west can come and get free treatment and then bomb us. My parents were immigrants too came over int he 70s with a skill and intergrated, and never attached the country.
that's not only an "unpopular view" - it's downright fucked-up.
i hate the west, and i'm not an immigrant. where do i sit in your hierarchy of righteousness?
that's not only an "unpopular view" - it's downright fucked-up.
i hate the west, and i'm not an immigrant. where do i sit in your hierarchy of righteousness?