Viewing 40 posts - 121 through 160 (of 503 total)
  • What to cut to fund the NHS?
  • ernie_lynch
    Free Member

    Nobody’s saying it was zero, it’s just doesn’t show on the graph.

    Which obviously makes Jamba’s graph even more meaningless than mine, ie, there was clearly spending for the first ten years of the NHS.

    I’m glad we’ve got that sorted out – thank you.

    Carry on…..

    outofbreath
    Free Member

    Which obviously makes Jamba’s graph even more meaningless than mine, ie, there was clearly spending for the first ten years of the NHS.

    …but Earnie, aren’t you just proving my point. You don’t trust me to assess the resources going into the NHS. Yet I’m one of the voters who are determining the resources dedicated to your healthcare.

    Much better for you to take me out of the equation and provide it for yourself, then you get *exactly* what you want.

    teamhurtmore
    Free Member

    Which obviously makes Jamba’s graph even more meaningless than mine

    Dont undersell yourself Ernie – your graph is a stark warning that we cant trust the Tories not to return us to Labour levels of spending. That’s a valuable message, thank you.

    ernie_lynch
    Free Member

    teamhurtmore – Member

    Have you not had a debate (sic) with Ernie before?

    I gave up attempting to have sensible debates with you THM as the result of silly and puerile comments such as this :

    teamhurtmore – Member

    I know people don’t like this Hunt bloke, but he must be really bad if he thinks that underfunding a business and running it into the ground would make it attractive for privatisation? Is this some new kind of strategy for preparing a company for the market? Still haven’t seen any prospectus yet though? Even odder still……

    Posted 1 day ago

    outofbreath
    Free Member

    Dont undersell yourself Ernie – your graph is a stark warning that we cant trust the Tories not to return us to Labour levels of spending. That’s a valuable message, thank you.

    It doesn’t matter which party it doing the harm.

    If you have a system where the key decision maker is deliberately sabotaging something, you need to take them out of the equation and do in another way. BUPA might not be perfect, but at least they’re not actively trying to provide bad healthcare!

    If there were two coffee shops in town, one where a succession of owners are deliberately doing it badly for malicious reasons and one where the guy is doing the job with the sole aim of getting more customers so he can cream off profit it’s clear which one’s gonna be better.

    teamhurtmore
    Free Member

    I gave up attempting to have sensible debates

    True, and you dont like having false points exposed either!

    how about “silly and peurile” comments such as no spending at all…..sensible debate???? no really!

    still always amusing to see the ingemar stenmark of internet debating in full flow.

    Drac
    Full Member

    Is it me or is this thread turning into this?

    ernie_lynch
    Free Member

    No it’s not just you…….that’s me on the left in red.

    stilltortoise
    Free Member

    Is it me or is this thread turning into this?

    That GIF is considerably more entertaining than watching Tae Kwon Do at the Olympics

    Richie_B
    Full Member

    The idea that contributions to the NHS should be based on lifestyle is a slippery slope (regardless of the statistics mountain biking is perceived as an extreme sport and would be one of the first to attract a premium even if its statistically safer than more main stream sports or activities).

    It also assumes that everyone has an equal choice in their lifestyle. The past 30 years has seen a vast increase in jobs which combine poor pay, little security, and irregular hours, which leave a lot of people without a control over a routine into which to fit family life let alone regular sport or activity.

    The NHS needs to decide what its for (what are its priorities and what are its boundaries) and social care needs to be more closely aligned and funded from the same pot so it can be better coordinated. This is a debate which politicians have been ducking for years because if its an honest debate no one is going to come out of it without scars.

    I’m no great fan of the military, or how politicians have taken to using it to increase their toughness credentials, but at the moment under current trade rules its one of the few ways a government can subsidise high tech domestic research and manufacturing.

    jambalaya
    Free Member

    The most important thing about NHS spending is that it is MUCH higher under the Tories than Labour proposed at the 2015 GE. The increase under the Tories is 5 times greater.

    The idea that contributions to the NHS should be based on lifestyle is a slippery slope

    Yes I do get that however we buy sports insurance which say covers only on piste skiing and more expensive which covers off piste

    As I posted before we in the UK pay far less in terms of personal / private health cover than the rest of Europe.

    grumpysculler
    Free Member

    As I posted before we in the UK pay far less in terms of personal / private health cover than the rest of Europe.

    Any party which stands on a platform of “you need to pay more” isn’t going to do very well.

    Such is the nature of the British voter (same for most other countries).

    It’s easy to say we can spend more money, finding it is a bit harder. Even here, someone said earlier you could cut MP’s expenses but I don’t think that even amounts to a drop in the ocean compared to NHS costs. The scale of most things passes by your average voter.

    zanelad
    Free Member

    It also assumes that everyone has an equal choice in their lifestyle. The past 30 years has seen a vast increase in jobs which combine poor pay, little security, and irregular hours, which leave a lot of people without a control over a routine into which to fit family life let alone regular sport or activity.

    Many of them still find the money to drink and smoke though. Perhaps they could jog to the newsagents and the offy?

    If they did neither, they’d be fitter, and the NHS would be a bit better off too.

    stilltortoise
    Free Member

    Yes I do get that however we buy sports insurance which say covers only on piste skiing and more expensive which covers off piste

    The thought of private health insurance working this way terrifies me. Life would become full of decisions based on whether you could financially afford the consequences based on what level of cover you have.

    Try my local road gap? No, I’m not covered for that activity and can’t afford the medical bill if I stack it. Solo that VS I’ve done dozens of times before at the local crag? Nope, if I fall I’m not covered and I’ll have to sell the house to pay the medical bills. Take my lad on the Fort William downhill track? etc

    I’m sure many people would argue that this is entirely right and fair, but it would be a huge change to become accustomed to when all I’m really trying to do is keep my mind and body healthy.

    teamhurtmore
    Free Member

    The most important thing about NHS spending is that it is MUCH higher under the Tories than Labour proposed at the 2015 GE. The increase under the Tories is 5 times greater.

    It would be interesting to see the data behind that conclusion.

    Tom_W1987
    Free Member

    Whats the problem with charging based on lifestyle?

    My wife pays thosuands more to use the NHs than you lot simply because she’s an immigrant, even though shes a higher band taxpayer and has private cover.

    Totally fine to tax the **** out of immigrants but not the fat jobless **** that are the ones placing a burden on the system.

    fifeandy
    Free Member

    NI should be like actual insurance, the British have shown that they are not responsible enough for proper socialised medicine. I want to see contributions go up based on age and lifestyle factors

    but not the fat jobless ****

    I’m thinking you didn’t quite think this plan all the way through

    ernie_lynch
    Free Member

    Tom_W1987 – Member

    Whats the problem with charging based on lifestyle?

    My wife pays thosuands more to use the NHs than you lot simply because she’s an immigrant, even though shes a higher band taxpayer and has private cover.

    Totally fine to tax the **** out of immigrants but not the fat jobless **** that are the ones placing a burden on the system.

    Sometimes I look at a post and really feel that I want to say something, but the whole post is so ridiculous that I just don’t know where to start.

    In the end I can’t be bothered.

    This is a good example.

    Tom_W1987
    Free Member

    Ok. Fat, lower tax band, lower NI contributing Northern Brexiteers that shit out too many kids.

    ernie_lynch
    Free Member

    Oh you’re upping the pleasantries, how nice.

    kerley
    Free Member

    Whats the problem with charging based on lifestyle?

    Can you think about how it would work for 20 seconds and then come back and tell us what you think the problems trying to implement it would be.

    nick1962
    Free Member

    Tax aircraft fuel and put VAT on airline tickets.

    grumpysculler
    Free Member

    Tax aircraft fuel

    Problem with that is that other countries don’t. If you start doing it, all your short haul flights will arrive in the UK with half full tanks and not take any on. And aircraft routings will be adjusted to limit the amount of UK fuel used.

    Changing taxes mostly changes behaviours and only sometimes raises money.

    Also, drop in the ocean compared to NHS funding.

    ernie_lynch
    Free Member

    Also, drop in the ocean compared to NHS funding.

    Are you sure? IIRC a few years back it was calculated at being worth £10bn per year, which would give the NHS a very healthy boost.

    br
    Free Member

    Problem with that is that other countries don’t. If you start doing it, all your short haul flights will arrive in the UK with half full tanks and not take any on. And aircraft routings will be adjusted to limit the amount of UK fuel used.[/I]

    The idea proposed that resulted in this answer is yet another in a long list of reasons for why you CANNOT allow the general public to be involved in actually policy decisions – otherwise you end up with ideas like this, Brexit and no doubt capital punishment. 😉

    docrobster
    Free Member

    if you want a healthier society you need a fairer society.
    We seem to be going in the opposite direction.
    Wasn’t it midday last Wednesday when ftse 100 ceo’s had earned the same as their employees will earn all year?
    And to all the healthy middle class educated folks banging on about penalising poor fat smokers for their lifestyle “choices”, google “social determinants of health”. Not everyone has the same choices to make, and if you are one of the unlucky ones, there is f-all you can do to change that.

    Tom_W1987
    Free Member

    Kerley, Sweden is already trialling it in a way by not paying for certain operations until the patient has lost weight.

    I don’t see why I should be paying for other peoples poor choices or bad genetics, seeing as Britain has collectively decided to punish me and my wife financially because I married a foreigner. And I damn well don’t see why I should be paying for hospital maternity bills if people argue it’s because we increased the population of the UK.

    Theresa May has been calling for an end to division in the UK, well her voters voted for division by giving them a mandate to bring in discriminatory immigration policies. Why is sivision only bad if its poor white people that feel hurt?

    edhornby
    Full Member

    The cheapest way to deliver healthcare is to do it instantly without too much prevarication like conditions to treatment or charging arguments (before or after the treatment) but of course that becomes expensive when it collides with charged model like the drug businesses that are global and interact with different methods

    If we wanted to pay for the NHS and all the other stuff we do on the cheap (schools, prisons, transport) we need to take an axe to the tons of daft tax laws that exist only to provide economic stimulus to business sectors (which is daft anyway) but all it does is provide loopholes for the likes of Barclays wealth to create tax dodge schemes. Hence everything is avoidance and HMRC are never confident of the line between avoid vs evade.

    Tom_W1987
    Free Member

    You mean the drug development model that requires crap loads of capital and investment to produce new types of drugs? Yeah sure, that could be nationalized world wide….hahah…..also…..Britain doesnt like experts so I doubt they’d like to see more government money ploughed into those ivory tower timewasting academics.

    jet26
    Free Member

    Separation of public health from NHS has not helped – health prevention is now driven by councils not NHS – cheaper to prevent many problems than treat.

    Separation of health and social care budgets not bright – incentive to keep elderly in hospital to save budget but at a far greater cost to UK plc.

    Lack of joined up working doesn’t help – competition and the internal market has not helped in many ways as that market has to be administered.

    Ultimately though, the issue isn’t just an NHS one – healthcare for the whole of planet earth is predicted to become unaffordable if current trends continue – arguing over which country then becomes irrelevant.

    nick1962
    Free Member

    Problem with that is that other countries don’t. If you start doing it, all your short haul flights will arrive in the UK with half full tanks and not take any on. And aircraft routings will be adjusted to limit the amount of UK fuel used.

    The idea proposed that resulted in this answer is yet another in a long list of reasons for why you CANNOT allow the general public to be involved in actually policy decisions – otherwise you end up with ideas like this, Brexit and no doubt capital punishment.

    Doh! I’d never thought of that 🙄
    Suppose it could be achieved if we were in an international trading and political organisation with the same rules and where most of the short haul flights began and ended …now there’s an idea 😉 Wasn’t the EU being praised in the Brexit thread for deregulating the national airline cartel/monoplies?? CBA checking back.

    Suppose we should give up on trying to regulate tax avoidance and offshore tax havens too because countries will never agree to that either.

    or we could just give in to vested business interests to the detriment of the world’s environment

    esselgruntfuttock
    Free Member

    Getting shot of a load of inert ‘managers’ in the public sector in general would help. (As TJ inferred)
    Don’t get me started on made up jobs in the prison service.

    cloudnine
    Free Member

    Stop hospital treatment for anyone over 80. Maybe have a big tar pit to throw them into on their 80th birthday.. Big celebration, big send off party and into the tar pit you go old people.

    Maybe fat people can be sacrificed and rendered down to heating oil if they top 30 stone. Right flashy.. You knew what would happen if you carried on eating at Gregg’s.. Into the rendering plant you go to keep the racing snakes warm.

    I have more if anyone is interested.

    Tom_W1987
    Free Member

    Separation of public health from NHS has not helped – health prevention is now driven by councils not NHS – cheaper to prevent many problems than treat.

    Separation of health and social care budgets not bright – incentive to keep elderly in hospital to save budget but at a far greater cost to UK plc.

    It’s like anything, spending more and more brings increasingly dimishing returns in terms of advancing lifespan. We now have loads and loads of old people, who can live for two decades of needing care. I have a gran who had mild alzheimers and she had anti-cancer drugs thrown at her, she survived cancer but she had basically lost it by the time the treatment finished…whyyyy?

    What we need to do is spend the serious money on improving peoples quality of life and useful working lifespan. Society needs to think about death more, realize that they are one day going to die and spend more time thinking about how their lives could be improved instead of always trying to delay the inevitable.

    jambalaya
    Free Member

    The thought of private health insurance working this way terrifies me. Life would become full of decisions based on whether you could financially afford the consequences based on what level of cover you have.

    Understood. The alternative is taking little or no responsibility for your actions (in extreme). Eat as much unhealthy food as you want and the state will pay for the consequences. Life insurance works this way too, there is a questionaire it’s reasonable for them to decline you if you are a BASE jumper. Anyway in practice we would just have proper health insurace allowing pre-existing conditions and working together with the State provision.

    jambalaya
    Free Member

    Tom yes indeed. Elderly care is something we really need to think about. Also the type of health care people are offered. If you step back and look at costs without emotion a huge amount is spent on treatments at end of life which offer no real extension of life and/or no improvement in quality. In many cases the patients don’t really want them.

    This is the charity which my neighbour who is an ex nurse aProfessor and CBE works with

    Homepage

    dallas95
    Free Member

    What about cutting the salaries of the chief exec’s and stopping the supply chain from ripping off hospitals and doctors surgeries. This issue has two sides, it needs proper funding but it also need s good and responsible management. I feel we are part way on the first step but a long way off the second and until that’s addressed we are just putting more and more money into the hands of people that waste it on our behalf.

    mikewsmith
    Free Member

    The ceo is one of the positions that I would really want some of the best in. It’s the key leadership role of the organisation.
    How are the supply chain ripping people off? Big paharma are not rolling in cash from drug development these days.

    vickypea
    Free Member

    Charge drunks for their treatment in A&E. Not alcoholics, but people who go out get rat-arsed and have a fight.

    Tom_W1987
    Free Member

    How are the supply chain ripping people off? Big paharma are not rolling in cash from drug development these days.

    +1

    My old company, developed a first of it’s kind drug – Imlygic – a genetically modified herpes virus designed to infect and kill skin cancer cells – really bleeding edge stuff.

    Oh but after decades of research, it turns out that it’s not very good at extending lifespan (last time I checked, as they didn’t have enough data on patients with lower grade more survivable skin cancer). Thus, I’m not sure whether they will actually ever turn a profit on the drug – getting these lofty treatments to market is a massive, massive risk financially to companies.

    Then the drugs that we do manage to get out there, get pissed up the wall by governments, clinical staff and the general public – through poor or over use – eg antibiotics – we even have people on here who demand extended treatment for lyme disease who cannot show any evidence of it’s efficiacy and who don’t mind that by using these drugs they are contributing to their eventual obsolesence. Whilst we have millions throughout the world who don’t have access to good healthcare or antibiotics?

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