Rolfe, you can't say that there isn't poverty and inequity in the UK. You need to take off the rose colored glasses because the real world isn't perfect. The NHS sure isn't perfect. What about taking away obesity surgery? For the morbidly obese, it's the only thing that works. Ah, but the fat people don't deserve it because they'll just get fat again. Ditto for the hip replacements. It's not cost effective. What about the women who get breast cancer who were denied life extending drugs. NICE decided it wasn't cost-effective. So they were denied extra time with their loved ones. The latest cutbacks are equally bad.
How can you deny that any Universal system MUST ration care? There are not enough resources to go around. When you centralize decision making, people become numbers and statistics and guidelines. The only people that need to be making the decisions are the patients and their doctors. What's wrong with that? And don't tell me that doctors in the UK have autonomy; they have to follow the NICE guidelines.
I'd much rather pool my money in a private insurance plan than in the government (I'd rather do none of those things). Government has no incentive to be efficient and I have no choice to change if I don't like it.
I never said it was utopia here, or that the NHS was perfect. Just that it's light-years better than what you guys have. You accused me of being unrealistic when I simply described, factually, the way it actually is here. Nobody has to worry about medical bills or access to healthcare. Not when making choices about employment, or when confronting a chronic illness, or suffering a catastrophic and unexpected accident. Nobody has to spend their lives obsessively saving and denying themselves all luxuries in order to provide for their or their families' healthcare.
It's that simple.
Last I heard, they were talking about extending obesity surgery, even including teenagers, because studies were suggesting it was more cost-effective than the alternatives. Hip replacements are SOP. I've got more friends and relations with new hips and knees and God alone knows what else than you could shake a stick at, all from the NHS, all free. None of them has anything but effusive praise for the treatment they received.
And what the hell breast cancer drug are you talking about? I can only guess it's the Herceptin saga. If it is, the depth of your misunderstanding of that issue rivals that of the Pacific Trench. (Hint. The vast majority of women prescribed Herceptin would not have experienced a recurrence anyway. The public protests had a lot more to do with the drug company organising an astroturf group than with genuine concern. And after all that NICE decided to approve it anyway.)
Yes, care is "rationed", but the ceiling is so high that it's out of sight for most people for their entire lives. The only people I know of who have been "denied" anything are in the pages of tabloid newspapers, so I don't even know how accurate the stories are. I have a very large extended family, most of whom are older than me. I have a 94-year-old mother (who is being positively cherished by the NHS), who has a bunch of geriatric friends. Everybody is getting a fair chunk of healthcare, and none of them is having anything "denied", or having to worry for half a second how it will be paid for.
You seem to find this so unbelievable you accuse me of rose-coloured spectacles and utopianism, but I'm merely describing the situation as it
actually is.
NICE has nothing to do with me because I don't live in England, but never mind that for now. NICE
is the senior doctors, charged with figuring out what best practice is. Would I rather my doctor just proceeded on what she thinks she remembers from a lecture on the subject 20 years ago, or has access to best practice guidelines produced by a committee of the top experts? What do you think?
And don't tell me doctors in the USA have autonomy. You seem to prefer that an insurance company apparatchik gets to decide whether the procedure your doctor recommends is medically necessary or not. OK, your choice. Just don't expect me to agree with you.
I don't agree that government has no incentive to be efficient. I see it busting a gut to achieve "efficiency savings" all the time. And since our system covers everybody in the country to a standard at least comparable to US outcomes, for half the outlay the USA spends on healthcare. I don't think you're going anywhere with that argument.
Rolfe.