Forum search & shortcuts

Nasty Tories at it ...
 

[Closed] Nasty Tories at it again

Posts: 0
Free Member
 

Blame? Frank Field, David Freud, Ian Duncan Smith would be a good starting point for that one.


 
Posted : 26/11/2016 6:53 pm
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

The architects of welfare reform.
Who'd have thought if you dismantle welfare safety nets and sanction benefits income for up to 3 years, folk might not, y'know, not be able to eat nutritiously


 
Posted : 26/11/2016 6:58 pm
Posts: 151
Free Member
 

Obesity is now a 'disease' of poverty. Wasn't long ago you had to be wealthy to get it.


 
Posted : 26/11/2016 7:03 pm
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

Just because you're eating enough cheap sugar and carbohydrate laden shit to suffer obesity, it doesn't follow you getting the correct nutrients in your diet.


 
Posted : 26/11/2016 7:09 pm
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

So are we saying that the food industry is responsible for malnutrition AND obesity in the poorer spectrum of society?
Chalk up another one to blame on capitalism, eh THM


 
Posted : 26/11/2016 7:11 pm
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

How about "quick to blame, slow to take responsibility" ism?

Who makes people buy sugary crap instead of drinking free water?


 
Posted : 26/11/2016 7:16 pm
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

The advertising industry. Chalk 2 to blame capitalism


 
Posted : 26/11/2016 7:19 pm
Posts: 151
Free Member
 

So are we saying that the food industry is responsible for malnutrition AND obesity in the poorer spectrum of society?

That's the problem with living in a free society. You're free to make bad choices. You no longer need to be rich to get gout.


 
Posted : 26/11/2016 7:22 pm
Posts: 34545
Full Member
 

Sugar addiction

https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23719144

Good article here
http://www.thelancet.com/journals/lancet/article/PIIS0140-6736(16)30795-4/fulltext

http://www.independent.co.uk/news/science/sugar-has-similar-effect-on-brain-as-cocaine-a6980336.html


Undernutrition remains a serious health issue for women and children in several developing countries, as pointed out by George Davey Smith in his Comment on the report on BMI trends (April 2, p 1349).1 However the situation is not exclusively undernutrition for the poor and overnutrition for the better off. The burden of obesity shifts progressively from the wealthier to the poorer groups with rising country income.2
Additionally, undernutrition and obesity can exist concurrently. This double burden of malnutrition has been observed at country, household, and even individual level. The typical pattern is an overweight or obese mother with a nutritionally stunted child. Although poverty is associated with undernutrition among children, it can result in obesity among adults.3

The Tories aren't just to blame for the rise in malnutrition, food bank dependency etc, they are also to blame for brexit ( Cameron you tit) that is going to hurt the poorest hardest, sweet 😉


 
Posted : 26/11/2016 7:26 pm
Posts: 14485
Free Member
 

Obesity is now a 'disease' of poverty. Wasn't long ago you had to be wealthy to get it.

When I see bottles of Laurent Perrier scattered about the council housing block instead of Buckfast you may have made a good point.


 
Posted : 26/11/2016 7:51 pm
Posts: 35142
Full Member
 

Obesity is now a 'disease' of poverty. Wasn't long ago you had to be wealthy to get it.

this is bollox to be honest. there is no link between social class and levels of obesity. The two groups least likely to be obese are poor men and rich women


 
Posted : 26/11/2016 7:52 pm
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

Thing is... it's much much cheaper to buy frozen processed food than it is to buy fresh produce..
I could get a bag of Turkey Twizzlers and some oven chips for the same price as a cauliflower and a head of broccoli..
In fact.. buying an oven ready lasagne would be half the price.. Setting up a cycle of sugar, msg and carbohydrate addiction at a young age for poor families desperate to feed their kids

It's a cynical profit orientated system and it's the poor that suffer most
Putting your fingers in your ears and singing lalalala just demonstrates what a useless **** you are in terms of fixing society's ills


 
Posted : 26/11/2016 7:52 pm
 dazh
Posts: 13400
Full Member
 

You no longer need to be rich to get gout.

FFS is that now the benchmark? I suppose we can also be thankful that working class proles can now afford to snort coke too?


 
Posted : 26/11/2016 7:53 pm
Posts: 151
Free Member
 

It's even cheaper to buy half as much frozen processed food.


 
Posted : 26/11/2016 7:55 pm
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

That aint coke, that's ephedrine and some kind of novocaine based anesthetic with a hefty price tag 😉


 
Posted : 26/11/2016 7:59 pm
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

It may be cheaper to buy half the amount but when you're only taking on calories with little or no nutritional value, I imagine that having a bit more gruel seems quite an appealing proposition.. In fact you've demonstrated my point very well 5thelephant, thanks


 
Posted : 26/11/2016 7:59 pm
Posts: 14485
Free Member
 

Gruel is underrated imho


 
Posted : 26/11/2016 8:02 pm
Posts: 17843
 

Let's not forget that for the last 25 years SAT's have been the holy miracle of education. Lessons encompassing practical subjects such as cookery were relegated to one term, is it any wonder why there's generations who know nothing about nutrition and how to create a meal using fresh ingredients.


 
Posted : 26/11/2016 8:08 pm
 rone
Posts: 9788
Free Member
 

do we have to go outside to have a crap with the scraps of paper to wipe our backsides
do we live longer
are we able to find out facts within a few seconds without having 20 copies of the encyclopaedia brittanica
do kids still suffer from polio

Yes, all good but none of that explains away why we still have people suffering. And why we are all so bloody selfish. I think you're missing my main point which is that we have not advanced as society and the way we think about each other. I mean we're arguing about it on the internet with great sophistication and technology but we're still arguing about it!


 
Posted : 26/11/2016 9:01 pm
Posts: 11402
Free Member
 

[url= https://www.theguardian.com/business/2016/dec/27/bhs-workers-swamp-charles-dickens-charity-with-help-requests ]want and ignorance seem to be on the rise[/url]


 
Posted : 27/12/2016 7:19 pm
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

Klunk - Member

want and ignorance seem to be on the rise

You say it as if it's a bad thing

[img] [/img]


 
Posted : 27/12/2016 7:35 pm
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

[url= http://www.openculture.com/2016/12/when-ayn-rand-collected-social-security-medicare.html ]if it's good enough for Tory /Chicago School Of Economics poster girl... [/url]


 
Posted : 27/12/2016 9:41 pm
Posts: 11402
Free Member
 

[url= http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/health-38538637 ]and there was me thinking UK plc[/url] was rocking along very nicely. I was wondering why with the soar away UK economy the government can't rustle up a bit of extra cash to see us through the winter, good for the the nhs and good for mrs mayhems rep/pole ratings.


 
Posted : 07/01/2017 11:16 am
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

But Mrs Maybe, like her predecessor, has a motive to underfund the NHS to the point of collapse, untill Branson swoops in and saves the day. Hunt wrote a little tome all about the process.


 
Posted : 07/01/2017 11:30 am
Posts: 34545
Full Member
 

I Had lunch with a GP from hull yesterday

He said their surgery was on the verge of collapse 3 GPS for 16000 people,

Can't fill the vacancies, he reckoned it was same across the whole of the north east, his opinion was that it must be deliberate because no government could be that stupid and the plan was just to privatise the lot .

No idea how many Jr docs have left because of Hunts contract but I know 2 who have left for the merry old land of Oz


 
Posted : 07/01/2017 11:34 am
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

Kimbers GPs got a stonking payrise under Labour and the ability to not have to do weekend working and home visits. Tories have increased budgets every year since. What's gone wrong ?

As an aside a good friend is a part time GP, she makes about £65k working part time. Filling vacancies depends on what's being offererd, in her veiw many practices try and take too big a cut for the partners.

Junior Docs Leaving. Perfect example of why their education should be fully paid for personally (Medical school is still heavily subsidised) or a minimum period working for the NHS. Aussies able to pay more as they don't use our funding system. Ditto Europe.

As I have said repeatedly I want to see a 30% increase in health spending, issue is how you find that £40bn pa

Health costs are rising at 4% pa way above inflation and gdp so we need higher taxes every year to pay for it.


 
Posted : 07/01/2017 11:48 am
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

Jamby. As usual, your post is full of disingenuous nonsense.

The budget increases, if at all existent, in no way match demand for the service. Whinging that Lab did something nearly a decade ago makes your defence of the Tories even more laughable.

Don't subsidise med school and the result will be no junior doctors. Or lots of immigrants filling their roles. I thought brexshit was all about reducing immigration of foreigners?

We could perhaps find that £40bn by not wasting it in brexshit, prosecuting tax minimisers and tax dodgers accordingly, and not spending £200bn on nukes

Higher taxes as you suggest would also be goo for the higher earners.


 
Posted : 07/01/2017 12:03 pm
 dazh
Posts: 13400
Full Member
 

his opinion was that it must be deliberate because no government could be that stupid and the plan was just to privatise the lot .

It's simpler than that. I doubt it's a deliberate policy, it's just an absence of policy. It's the same with teacher numbers and the crisis in social care. They just don't give a shit. And because of that they don't have a policy, and don't do anything about it. A tory govt's single purpose is to enable their backers (we know who they are) to continue getting richer, and to entrench their power. Everything else is just incidental froth which will only be addressed when it threatens their privileged position.

I find it amazing quite frankly that people allow them to get away with it. It's all very well being angry and indignant, but until the population at large decides it's had enough and moves to do something about it (and I'm not talking about voting), then there's not much point.


 
Posted : 07/01/2017 12:34 pm
Posts: 26901
Full Member
 

and not spending £200bn on nukes

Lefty nonsense no credible politician could say this we need a mass suicide device.

doubt it's a deliberate policy, it's just an absence of policy. It's the same with teacher numbers and the crisis in social care.

I think it is deliberate with teachers no one could be stupid enough to do what they have done without a motive.


 
Posted : 07/01/2017 12:39 pm
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

As an aside a good friend is a part time GP,

😆
As I have said repeatedly I want to see a 30% increase in health spending, issue is [b]how you find that £40bn pa[/b]

*strokes chin*


 
Posted : 07/01/2017 12:41 pm
Posts: 7368
Free Member
 

Well put dazh!


 
Posted : 07/01/2017 12:44 pm
 awh
Posts: 24
Free Member
 

Kimbers GPs got a stonking payrise under Labour and the ability to not have to do weekend working and home visits. Tories have increased budgets every year since. What's gone wrong ?

The overall NHS budget has increased but not funding for General Practice which has dramatically fallen. GP pay has also steadily fallen in recent years, 13% isn't uncommon. GPs have cut their wages to maintain the pay for the other practice salaried employees as income for the practice is determined by complex contracts covering the services they provide and undertake.
People seem to think that being a GP just seeing patients, there's a hell of a lot more work clinical and practice management work that goes on.


 
Posted : 07/01/2017 2:03 pm
Posts: 5559
Free Member
 

dont challenge jamby with facts he is immune to the rational truth


 
Posted : 07/01/2017 2:45 pm
Posts: 34545
Full Member
 

The GP did say that he was making a fortune converting all the extra shifts, his plan was to make enough and get out before privatisation hits


 
Posted : 07/01/2017 3:07 pm
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

Toires won the election promising an extra £8bn pa and will deliver £10bn. £8bn is what the NHS asked for. The Tories totally demolished Labour on the NHS in 2010. Smashed them. £10bn pa after 5 years is 7.7% The issue is rising costs far outstripping inflation, to stand still the NHS needs 21.6% increase in it's budget or about £28bn pa by the end of the Parliament. That's why campaigners are calling a £10bn increase as a cut as costs increase you have to cut something if the budget rises more slowly.

Zokes feel free to find a politcial party suggesting that (not even the Greens) then vote for them. You list of where the money wouod come from is a campaigners fantasy list. In 13 years Labour failed to prodice anything from that list.

Trident spending is a chuckle as posters keep inflating it, originally the inflated figure was £130bn over 30 years, now I see Zokes and others using £200bn. Why stop there, why not £300bn ? Anyway £200bn is still only £6.7bn a year, barely 17% of what's required and that's before you factor in the negative impacts on employment and manufacturing which would come from cancelling the whole project.

BTW my GP friend was very negative about the Labour reforms and budget increaes, she said right from the beginning Doctors would just take a big chunk of the extra money in wages and opt out of anti social weekend working and home visits.

The French have much higher taxes (most STWers would pay 50%) and much higher national insurance (one reason why unemployment is 10% amd 25% amongst young), they have VAT on food (10%) and they still have a hybrid health service with most middle class citizens paying monthly private health insurance which supplements the state system and works TOGETHER with it complementing the state contribution, something ours in the UK does not.

The UK needs to have a sensible conversation about how the fund health service and how it should work. Currently that's simply not possible without knee jerk nonsense I see above. So we as a country will just keep suffering. The NHS needs £28pa extra by 2020 and Labour where promising £2bn. 7% of what's needed FFS. Safe in our hands and saving the NHS eh ?


 
Posted : 07/01/2017 3:52 pm
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

Id GLADLY pay more tax if folk werent actively ended by the DWP for ridiculous "crimes"
Id gladly pay more tax if no one, and i do mean noone faced starvation or homelessness
Id gladly pay more tax if the NHS was allowed to be run in a proper, efficient manner with proper costings in the supply chain etc.


 
Posted : 07/01/2017 4:36 pm
Posts: 5559
Free Member
 

£8bn is what the NHS asked for.

completely and utterly untrue

The boss of the NHS has told Jeremy Hunt that the health service may need closer to £21bn extra over the next few years, far more than the £8bn ministers have promised.

In pointed remarks made on Friday and aimed at the health secretary, Simon Stevens said people should not “rewrite history” on the exact sums the NHS in England will need by 2020. Hunt has repeatedly stressed that the government has pledged to boost the NHS budget by £8bn over that period because that is the amount set out in a blueprint unveiled in 2014 called the NHS Five Year Forward View, which Hunt, David Cameron and George Osborne now call “the Stevens plan”.

In a major speech on Friday to NHS leaders, Stevens reminded Hunt that the document said the health service would need £8bn-£21bn by 2020, and would only cope with the smaller amount if major progress was made on improving social care, public health and how NHS care was delivered.


Five MPs led by Sarah Wollaston, the Conservative chair of the Commons health select committee, have demanded the government abandon its “incorrect” claim that it is putting £10bn into the NHS annual budget by the end of parliament.
https://www.theguardian.com/society/2016/oct/31/how-much-extra-money-tory-government-really-giving-nhs

I best explain jambers that is what the rational folk call referencing your claim with actual evidence.


The Tories totally demolished Labour on the NHS in 2010
Did anyone else read that in the voice of Trump?
they have never been more trusted on the NHS than Labour

As always the facts and you are immiscible


 
Posted : 07/01/2017 4:58 pm
 awh
Posts: 24
Free Member
 

BTW my GP friend was very negative about the Labour reforms and budget increaes, she said right from the beginning Doctors would just take a big chunk of the extra money in wages and opt out of anti social weekend working and home visits.

Home visits occur as one of a GPs sessions during the week i.e. a morning or afternoon, a practice GP will make home visits. They don't opt out.
Labour's reforms spilt out the out of hours GP services into separate contracts. GP practices could tender to provide the service in their area and so could other companies. Since the Health and Social Care act Clinical Commissioning Groups have commissioned OoH services. They do not all fund them to the same level hence some areas have crap OoH coverage.

It's hardly surprising that practice GPs don't want to take up OoH work. They typically see patients between 0830 and 1800, but this will likely overrun. Then ether side there's preparing to see patients, completing paperwork, practice management meetings, producing health strategies for the area, people management, professional development, tendering services etc. This burden has increases since the H&SC Act. The demographics of GPs is changing, many more are women with children and prefer to work reduced hours to be with their children, so aren't available to work OoH. Being an OoH GP isn't just getting up occasionally in the night to see a patient, it's full-time seeing patients with conditions that are often more complex.


 
Posted : 07/01/2017 5:13 pm
Posts: 66128
Full Member
 

"The great masses will more easily fall victim to a big lie than to a small one"


 
Posted : 07/01/2017 5:17 pm
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

The UK needs to have a sensible conversation about how the fund health service and how it should work.

Until we all accept that we will have to pay for health care in some manner, sensible conversations are impossible

find it amazing quite frankly that people allow them to get away with it. It's all very well being angry and indignant, but until the population at large decides it's had enough and moves to do something about it (and I'm not talking about voting), then there's not much point.

Or perhaps they have a more accurate picture of what is going on?


 
Posted : 07/01/2017 5:44 pm
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

Junkyard - lazarus

£8bn is what the NHS asked for.

completely and utterly untrue

I don't think it is utterly untrue Junkyard, see below.

.

jambalaya - Member

The NHS needs £28pa extra by 2020 and Labour where promising £2bn. 7% of what's needed FFS. Safe in our hands and saving the NHS eh ?

I think you've got your facts a little mixed up jambalaya.

First of all I don't know what [i]"The NHS needs £28pa extra by 2020"[/i] means or where you got that figure from. As you yourself pointed out in Oct 2014 the NHS itself said that it needed an extra £8bn by 2020.

[url= https://www.theguardian.com/society/2014/oct/23/nhs-radical-overhaul-hospitals-8bn-services ]The NHS calls for an extra £8bn by 2020 in order to safeguard its services[/url]

During the 2015 general election campaign Labour promised an extra £2.5bn a year on NHS spending, which over 5 years I make £12.5bn - more than the NHS asked for.

Furthermore as Junkyard has pointed out the cross-party Health Select Committee has claimed :

[url= http://www.independent.co.uk/news/uk/home-news/nhs-funding-conservative-pledge-jeremy-hunt-government-a7144096.html ]Conservative boost to NHS 'half what was pledged in manifesto'[/url]

[i][b]'In our view, the funding announced in the Spending Review does not meet the Government’s commitment'[/b][/i]

Note this:

[b][i]The Government has changed its definition of NHS spending since 2015/16 so it only includes money going to NHS England, excluding other NHS resources, according to the report.

Through cutting some parts of the Department of Health’s budget, such as from recruiting staff and health promotion schemes, it gave NHS England a big budget increase. The areas now excluded from the figures, for instance programmes preventing obesity, have a direct impact on frontline services.[/i][/b]

So this present Tory government is shifting money from areas of the NHS (which are now no longer considered to be NHS spending) to other areas so that it can claim that it is "extra" spending on the NHS.

Who would have thought that the Tories could do such as thing ?


 
Posted : 07/01/2017 5:46 pm
Posts: 5559
Free Member
 

I don't think it is utterly untrue Junkyard, see below.
mildly false
somewhat misleading?

As I quoted they asked for a minimum of 8 billion and they did not ask, as you noted for other services to be cut within the NHS to fund the NHS

Misleading or a simplification is probably a more accurate term though


 
Posted : 07/01/2017 5:52 pm
Posts: 12670
Free Member
 

Did anyone else read that in the voice of Trump?

I tend to read all of his posts in the voice of Trump. It is so fitting for someone who just makes stuff up and then keeps repeating it as though it becomes true after the 10th time.

Also never replies to any question about what he says.

Do you think he might actually be Trump?


 
Posted : 07/01/2017 6:13 pm
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

Now now kerly 🙂 I did sit next to Steve Mnuchin for a year when in NYC (he's the new Treasury Secretary), that's my only claim to Trumpain fame.

Ernie NHS asked for £8bn pa by 2020 but what I find really odd is many interviews inc from CEO say that costs are growing at 4% pa - so I compounded that over the 5 year term of the Parliament and applied it to the annual NHS budget.

Yes there are cuts in services as the rate at which the Government is increasing the NHS budget is slower than the rate of inflation in providing those services. In the 10 years from 2010 to 2020 NHS spending will increase by £35bn but the increasing cost of services is eating that up plus population ageing.

IMO one of our biggest issues is we do not spend enough on Private Healthcare (see link below) and that IMO is due to the terrible lack of co-operation between NHS and Private systems.

https://www.kingsfund.org.uk/projects/nhs-in-a-nutshell/health-care-spending-compared


 
Posted : 07/01/2017 10:38 pm
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

^^^ I know Junkyard has said in the past that our much lower spending cost/head in GDP terms is due to NHS efficiency meaning it's "cheaper". My view is we are spending much less and getting much less

Healthcare spending in billions since 1950. As I said Nationally we need a serious conversation as it's not enough

[img] [/img]


 
Posted : 07/01/2017 10:51 pm
Page 6 / 7