I guess im lucky im in the UK then.
Or we dont think we can start you on dialysis cause well you are over the cutoff age of 65.
That was an example Zach.
New Zealand rations kidney dialysis. Thus, most New Zealanders over age 75 are barred from treatment for end-stage renal failure.
These 55/70 million people who don’t get health care because there are too few doctors — are they included in the statistics? Or are the statistics “improved” by excluding the deaths of these people?
The problem is these people most likely go through the emergency room to get their healthcare which raises the costs for everyone.Its trying to stem the millions of dollars wasted by visits to the ER that are not needed and could be handled by a GP.
I’ll answer some comments from my personal experience.
I have seen some of the comments about the UK’s NHS elsewhere — in US propaganda that seeks to maintain the status quo. It may have been true to some extent a decade or more ago, but not now. In the last ten years the UK has doubled expenditure on the NHS bringing the standards up to the rest of Europe.No one has to use the NHS; anyone can use a private hospital and, if they need to do so, pay insurance to cover the cost. I do so, although I intend to stop paying for it at the end of the current year because my recent experience with the NHS shows that I’m wasting my money.I’ll answer some comments from my personal experience. The UK has one of the highest suicide rates in Europe.That’s not true. Using the World Health data published in 2008 the following European countries have a higher suicide rate than the UK (in order from highest to lowest): Lithuania, Slovenia, Hungary, Latvia, Belgium, Estonia, Finland, France, Poland, Austria, Czech Republic, Denmark, Sweden, Bulgaria, Germany, Slovakia, Romania, Portugal, Ireland, Netherlands, Spain, Italy.The following are lower than the UK:Malta, Greece.in order to have blood-tests etc I am forced to pay.I have monthly blood tests which cost me nothing.OK lets say we give an additional 55/70 million people free healthcare. We dont have enough doctors to cover these extra people.So you have 55/70 million people who need health care but don’t get it?In Great Britain and New Zealand, 46 percent of women with breast cancer die. In the United States, a quarter of breast cancer patients now die from it – that is, 75 percent here survive the disease. 2004 statistics are: UK death rate 32%, US death rate 23% (Click )Bureaucrats aren't responsive to patients, and patients suffer moreIndeed so. It seems to me that the US system has more bureaucrats than the NHS owing to the need to invoice and pay fees.I can’t find anything to substantiate the major surgery issue nor the prostate mortality.These 55/70 million people who don’t get health care because there are too few doctors — are they included in the statistics? Or are the statistics “improved” by excluding the deaths of these people?
No one has to use the NHS; anyone can use a private hospital and, if they need to do so, pay insurance to cover the cost.