Rolfe
Adult human female
Somehow, however, I doubt this is the case in actual practice in the UK and other places with socialized medicine. For example, is it possible to pay for a service yourself if the government denies the service? If so, then the rich still have better access to care and the poor are still denied services that might extend/better their lives, even if a government bean counter doesn't think it's worth it. So the system may cost less for the government to run, but can you really say it's gives all citizens equal access to medical care?
For example, a poor man who is alcoholic needs a new liver, but the government denies it because it isn't cost effective to give an alcoholic a new liver. He dies 6 months later. A rich man will also be denied the transplant, but he can simply pay for it out of his own pocket. He gets to live another 10 years or more. Even if it isn't allowed by law, he can still travel to another country where it is allowed.
Good grief, the amount of misconceptions in one short post! You obviously have the wrong end of the stick in a big way. I wonder what sort of propaganda is being fed to Americans, for people to think like this?
The government never denies anyone a service. What care you get is entirely in the hands of your doctor. The closest thing to a "bean counter" such as you envisage is NICE, and it's Scottish and Welsh counterparts. These organisations are committees of (OK, Government-appointed) top consultants who decide whether expensive new drugs are cost-effective. The aim is to avoid throwing money away on Big Pharma's latest money-spinner, not to deny people effective medication.
The sort of treatments that don't get approved by NICE are the hugely expensive anti-cancer drugs which don't cure but only prolong the dying process for a bit longer. When someone doesn't get something like that it tends to be big news and journalists write sob stories about it, but it's not a circumstance that ever affects the vast majority of the population. And if one person decides to ask for a judicial review (which is their right, because the health service belongs to US), and wins, then that's it - that drug is available to everyone else who needs it from then on.
I don't think you have any conception just how comprehensive the care provided by the NHS actually is. People are free to take out private medical insurance, or pay privately for procedures, but they usually only do that to get an elective procedure done at a time of their own choosing, and/or to go to a swankier hospital without the possibility of rubbing shoulders with the proletariat.
The decisions on who gets a transplant are taken entirely by the transplant co-ordinating teams, who decide on the basis of who needs any available organ most. You CANNOT pay for one.
There's a fair bit of agonising about how to share out scarce transplant organs, but alcoholics are not denied a transplant if they convince the transplant teams that they're off the sauce - not point in giving a liver to someone who'll just go right on drinking.
And of course they get it wrong sometimes. Look up the case of George Best, who got a new liver, was fine for a while, and then fell back off the wagon. I saw a TV programme about the decision-making process for liver transplantation, and one memorable case was a man with severe depression who had ODed on paracetamol. They decided to give him a liver. He absconded from a hospital some time later and jumped off Beachy Head.
The subsequent discussions were to the effect that if the committee was making the decisions about right, then there were bound to be cases like that. If this never happened it would suggest they were being too restrictive and possibly denying organs to people who would indeed benefit.
And the government has no say in any of this at all. They pay the doctors to take these decisions and treat the patients. Micromanagement is not what they do.
Rolfe.
Last edited:
