There aren't enough jawdrops for this entire thread!
I wonder what Beerina and Bob Blaylock are orbiting. Volatile is exactly right. NHS care is hugely, vastly superior to the US system if one considers the little matter of access. It's main problem is waiting for non-urgent treatment. However, if your problem is urgent you will get treated. No question. Immediately. Nobody says, you can't be seen for your ruptured appendix or your myocardial infarction till next month! Even elective things are prioritised by clinical need, so someone in a lot of pain will get their hip replacement sooner than someone coping OK. And
everybody will be treated, it doesn't matter if you're a top rocket scientist or an unemployed single mother with a heroin habit.
A lot of sniping goes on over the wait times, because some waits have been too long (and that is being addressed), and of course people who have to wait tend to bitch about it, often to the media, and guess what, that is instrumental in getting things improved. However, nobody would seriously trade a wait of a few weeks or even months for elective surgery
free-at-the-point-of-need (is there
any way to stop people just quoting that first word out of context?) for the chancy and wildly expensive US system. Anyway, France has a universal healthcare system that operates a different way, and they don't have waiting lists. So if that's your big gripe, go look at how the French manage it!
As someone commented on another thread, the reason some people get such quick service in the USA is that others, whose need may well be even greater, cannot access the system
at all.
And waiting times aside, I've yet to be told about anything available in the US that wouldn't be provided to a patient who needed it in Britain. (OK, there have been occasional stories of people raising money to fly to the USA for some pioneering procedure, but that's a function of the relative affluence and the size of the US meaning that some things do emerge there first, not of strangulation of innovation in Britain.) Some drugs have been kept off the menu, but the reasons for that have been mainly lack of sufficient evidence of efficacy.
How about this one? Would that child have been treated any better in the USA? If that child had been American, would she have been
assured of treatment, no matter who she was? Just what is it that the US system will provide to insured patients that won't be provided to patients in Britain (if possibly a little later in some cases)?
Beerina thinks that more people die and suffer more misery because of lack of innovation. This is "not even wrong", as they say. It displays such a complete lack of understanding of how such systems work, and in particular the way medical innovation just goes right on its merry way, profits and all, that I simply despair.
Bob Blaylock announces, in the teeth of all the evidence, that we "would" have poorer quality health care at higher total cost (than the USA, presumably), if we had - the system we actually have! News flash. We pay, from our taxes, a smaller percentage of our net income, to fund the whole caboodle, for everybody, from antenatal care to heart transplants, than you guys pay just to fund Medicare and Medicaid, from which you derive no benefit.
I doubt if you'd find ten people in Britain who would trade that for your system, on a bet.
And you're not even interested in considering it, because of spurious ideological objections that don't even relate to the real world. Wake up and smell the coffee.
Rolfe.