Quote from: yorkshireman on March 17, 2011, 06:39:37 pmbut as taxpayers we all pay for the nhs,you dont get anything for free I suspect you'd still pay the same amount of tax even if the NHS became wholly private.
but as taxpayers we all pay for the nhs,you dont get anything for free
slack line:i broke my hand just over a year ago,i waited 9 months to find out it was broken and that included 3 trips to a specialist,several cancellations(by them) and in total it cost me about £30 in fuel and a further £20 in car parking charges not to mention an average of a 45 minute wait beyond the alloted time of my appointment.i agree that patient care should be the main priority and at the moment with the nhs i dont think its the case.ovee the last 20 years ive noticed a downward trend of care quality in my local hospitals(pontefract general and pinderfields) so something needs to be done and although its not nice,money needs to be saved as we cant afford to throw money away on management and beurocracy when it could be better spent on patient care.i will admit now that im not 100% sure what the answer is,only that there must be better ways of doing it than is currently being done
I've not signed it. I think the NHS needs extensive reform <dons hard hat> although Andrew Lansley is making a complete cock up of everything he touches.
I don't get the idea that if the NHS is being mismanaged then that by privatising it, it'll somehow become well managed. These seem to be two seperate issues. British rail anyone?
Surely this is the main point - QuoteI don't get the idea that if the NHS is being mismanaged then that by privatising it, it'll somehow become well managed. These seem to be two seperate issues. British rail anyone? I cannot believe that more private sector involvement in any major organisation like the NHS can ever be a good thing?
http://www.bmj.com/content/342/bmj.d1695.fullthis is a very informative article that gives depressing reading.
sheffieldanticuts.wordpress.com/ ....blocked by Sheffield City Council, Hmmm
Study proposal: changes to the NHSAs there is no overwhelming evidence in support of the proposed changes to the NHS (1) as detailed in the governments' recent white paper, ethically the proposed changes can only take place in the form of a trial. I ask you to consider favourably the following study proposal which I submit without permission on behalf of the UK government.Title: Reorganisation of the NHS in EnglandBackground: The National Health Service in is its 63rd year. It is suffering the same demographic and technological challenges as all high income countries, specifically ageing of the population and increasingly expensive new technologies. These are major problems that we seek to address.We also have concerns about outcomes in the NHS when compared with other countries. France spends more on healthcare than the UK, has fewer deaths from heart attacks than the UK, and will shortly be overtaken by the UK in this mortality measure. We determine from this observation that the UK healthcare system is not delivering as much as it should and must change, but not to be like France in funding or structure, and hopefully not in the trend in heart attack deaths. We do not consider this to be an ecological fallacy, and we do not consider any other differences between the populations of France and England. (2)Study design: Immediate full scale roll out without control or comparison group.What this study adds to the current evidence: We offer no global, systematic appraisal of current evidence, and take no account of quality of evidence. As lawmakers evidence in the legal sense is our primary concern: oral and written statements from individuals and organisations, and we do not distinguish this from higher quality evidence. (3) We are confident that this study will accrue a substantial body of similar (grade 5) non-evidence with which to inform future reorganisations.Study population: The entire population of England, of all ages, is served by the NHS, with the exception of the most wealthy, who will be exempt.Interventions: 1. A market based healthcare system; open to all willing providers. 2. GP based commissioning and the closure of primary care trusts. 3. Transfer of public health to local authorities. 4. Providers that cannot generate enough profit will close, whereas those making the largest profits will succeed, irrespective of the clinical performance. Taxpayer funding will continue, allowing successful firms to become a conduit of money from the many to the few.Comparison group: NoneOutcomes: No a priory health outcomes are specified, although multiple testing, case studies and post hoc analyses are planned by all political parties for election purposes and generation of low grade evidence.Ethical considerations: No ethical approval has been sought. We acknowledge the risk associated with changing the health service, and are aware that small changes in important health outcomes can cause or prevent thousands of deaths. (3) As we are certain that our approach is correct, we have no stopping criteria.Consent: Population level consent sought and an election almost won on the basis of: "No top down reorganisation of the NHS". No consent sought on the specific interventions.Costing: Estimated ?1Bn to ?3Bn, with potential future savings. Taxpayers are the sole funders.Potential conflicts of interest: None declared although newspapers report the secretary of state for health has received ?21,000 from the chairman of Care UK to fund his personal office. (4)Thank you for consideration of our proposal.josephlee@doctors.org.uk1 Pollock A and Price D BMJ 2011 342:d1695; doi:10.1136/bmj.d1695 2 Appleby J BMJ 2011; 2011; 342:d566 3 Letter from health minister Paul Burstow MP http://www.guardian.co.uk/society/2011/feb/08/deconstruction-of-the-nhs- bill?INTCMP=SRCH 4 http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/newstopics/mps-expenses/6989408/Andrew- Lansley-bankrolled-by-private-healthcare-provider.htmlCompeting interests: JJL is both an NHS patient and an NHS employee.
can someone explain to me why privatisation would be so bad for the nhs because at the moment the nhs is an underachieving and wasteful business that needs major change.at the moment the nhs has no competition therefore it can get away with underperforming