Jimgward wrote: ↑Sat Feb 11, 2017 8:21 pm
Jimgym wrote: ↑Sat Feb 11, 2017 5:27 pm
Jimgward wrote: ↑Sat Feb 11, 2017 11:05 am
So, an international think tank is debunked by a single blogger, and you reference it
I work supplying the NHS. I'm in hospitals every week. I see inefficiencies and waste, problems and wrongs, every day. I also see the best.
The NHS has much to do, but it's the UK's jewel. Only idiots would propose getting rid of it.
Privatisation is coming in, big time. It's time every MP and Minister with links to private health companies, wore a badge to identify that in health debates.
Let's fix the system, rather than destroy it, as May and her lackeys are wont to do.
Could you tell us how May and her lackeys are destroying it? Also, who is proposing getting rid of it?
You must be joking. NHS England is slowly being privatised by the back door. Companies like Virgin Healthcare and Atos are winning contracts monthly, for billions of pounds. Providers replaced with private companies. NHS England is deteriorating by the day.
It doesn't happen in Scotland as its a completely different structure. No privatisation of core medical services.
Hunt (c) is like an assassin, employed to do a specific task. All the time spreading platitudes, whils't loading bullets. 2020 will be the key date when the government will decide that the NHS cant work and needs radical change, that will involve paying for many services. Free at the point of delivery will disappear. It's already starting. Diabetics being told free test strips are disappearing.....
Wouldn't I be right in saying that Scotland and Wales (that have less privatisation than England) have worse health outcomes...?
And on the privatisation thing...
Most of the 'stuff' that the NHS uses, you know, MRI scanners, beds, bedpans, sheets, stethoscopes, heart monitors, drugs.... I'm sure you get the idea... Aren't they all made by private companies already...? So privatisation maybe isn't such a bad thing after all...? Many of the 'providers' are already private companies.
The problem with the NHS is that it is a monopoly that the great British public are forced to pay for under threat of imprisonment... I completely agree that turning a government run monopoly into a privately run one would be terrible...
But opening it up to privately run competition would surely be a good thing...?