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The madness of feeding this ravenous NHS (UK's National Health Service)
The Times of London ^ | October 11, 2007 | Camilla Cavendish

Posted on 10/12/2007 1:43:28 AM PDT by 2ndDivisionVet

Whatever you made of the Chancellor’s various sleights of hand on Tuesday, lurking beneath his Budget plans was one inescapable fact. The hungry maw of the NHS is swallowing more and more resources, at the expense of virtually everything else. The defence budget is at its lowest since 1930, despite our dwindling troops being dotted across three continents. Prison overcrowding is at such record levels that Jack Straw will have to release even more inmates early in a few weeks’ time. But the health service marches relentlessly on, having hoovered up two thirds of the increase in public spending in the past five years.

Even “enterprise” – once one of Mr Brown’s favourite words – has been tapped. This week’s new taxes on small business seemed unwise, given the fragility of the economy. They were also wholly avoidable, had the NHS been awarded the 3 to 3.5 per cent spending settlement that was expected. But a 4 per cent annual rise for the NHS, raising its budget from £90 billion to almost £110 billion by 2010, seemed to have become a political imperative.

Why? Well, 4 per cent is a nice round number. It is also more than half the 7 per cent annual increases that the service has got used to. But it is also simply very hard to row back once you’ve built an expanded State. This applies to all public services – which is why I wonder whether Messrs Darling and Brown will actually meet their lower spending targets – but it is particularly acute in health.

The NHS is Britain’s last big state monopoly. It is the largest employer in the developed world. Its 1.4 million staff outnumber the private and public healthcare workforce of Germany, a country with 25 per cent more people and better health outcomes. Its powerful unions view any slowdown in spending growth as a “cut”. And cut is a deadly word in political terms. The Government had its chance, when it was flush with cash, to demand reform as a quid pro quo for more money. But it did not go far enough.

In the 1990s it was possible to argue that the NHS was starved of cash. But not any more. Britain is now spending at about the European average, but lags behind too many other European countries in terms of results. Far too many cancer patients, babies and stroke victims are still dying needlessly. Far too many patients, particularly the elderly, are treated with a callousness bordering on brutality. Almost everyone I know who has had a baby recently has been told by the nurses to bring their own Jif, and not to set foot in an NHS shower without scrubbing it. World-class that isn’t.

Sir Derek Wanless, Gordon Brown’s former health guru, reported last month that almost half of the extra £45 billion that has been spent in the past five years has gone on pay and price inflation. The NHS generates its own inflation as though it were a country in its own right. But the slowdown in government spending is not, sadly, due to a realisation that there are diminishing returns to spending in a monolithic health service. It is merely the Government running low on cash.

The real issues are repeatedly obscured by homilies about the NHS being the envy of the world. The latest to fall into this trap is Lord Darzi of Denham, the eminent surgeon who is supposed to be reviewing the structure of the NHS. Thank heavens he is still practising on Thursdays and Fridays. For his interim report last week was little more than an advert for the Government’s two populist priorities: extending GP opening hours and tackling MRSA. Until then, the greatest worry about the Darzi review had been that it might delay progress towards much needed reforms. No one had dreamt that he would be coopted into a propaganda exercise. We do not need a top surgeon to tell us to wash our hands. Nor to invent another centralised “Innovation Council” to champion change, a snip at £100 million. The NHS badly needs more innovation. But you cannot impose it. You can only nurture it, by liberating doctors and by introducing competition.

If this simple fact is not obvious to ministers by now, then all is lost. For the limited moves that the last Blair administration made to introduce competition have paid off handsomely. Letting independent providers carry out some procedures has slashed waiting lists for hip replacements, cataracts and heart operations, and has raised the standard for what can be achieved. Payment by results and the NHS tariff have helped to make costs more transparent and to give a wake-up call to poor performers. Giving the best hospitals more freedom as foundation trusts, under a savvy regulator, has injected a new sense of financial rigour.

Yet ministers have always been embarrassed to claim credit for these achievements, which are loathed by the unions. They are in the strange position of presiding over some brave reforms while having to bloviate about minor issues: free health checks (didn’t we used to get those at the doctor?) and expanded GP opening hours (which was the norm, until ministers decided to pay them more to do less).

Ministers are too easily persuaded that the battle is between public and private provision. They are ashamed to endorse the private. But the real battle is between those who want to protect their monopolies – including many private hospitals – and those who want competition. Many NHS insiders who believe most fervently in the service are those who are fighting for competition. But they are still an endangered species. It is of no help to them when ministers send ambivalent signals.

No one is quite sure yet how committed the new Prime Minister is to market-based reforms. The opposition parties will not ask him. Labour’s largesse has boxed them into a corner. Neither Conservatives nor Liberals dare to make the case for proper reform.

That is the real price of having built a bloated State. No one dares speak the truth, because there are so many vested interests to offend. But the writing is on the wall: a tax-funded free healthcare system is looking ever less sustainable. Politicians always fear the “popularity” of our health service. But that popularity will wane if the NHS comes to be seen as the enemy of every other public service.

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— Camilla Cavendish will be speaking on child protection at the Battle of Ideas on Saturday, October 27. More details at www.battleofideas.org.uk


TOPICS: Business/Economy; Culture/Society; Editorial; Government; Politics/Elections; United Kingdom
KEYWORDS: britain; bureacracy; democratparty; democrats; disease; eu; europe; fatso; freehealthcare; governmentwaste; healthcare; hillary; hillarycare; hillaryclinton; illness; inflation; labourparty; medicine; michaelmoore; natlhealthservice; nhs; sicko; socialism; socializedmedicine; taxation; taxes
But Michael Moore told us how great all this was...my brain hurts!!
1 posted on 10/12/2007 1:43:39 AM PDT by 2ndDivisionVet
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To: 2ndDivisionVet
The NHS badly needs more innovation. But you cannot impose it. You can only nurture it, by liberating doctors and by introducing competition.

Something Hillary obviously doesn't care about.

2 posted on 10/12/2007 2:05:24 AM PDT by AlaskaErik (I served and protected my country for 31 years. Democrats spent that time trying to destroy it.)
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To: 2ndDivisionVet

The ONLY permanent solution to health care. When the second Adam (Christ) and second Eve (his perfected church) tend the new Eden (Christ’s Kingdom), they will make sure EVERYBODY has unfettered and free access to the tree of life. Until then, stay as far away from socialized medicine as possible.

Revelation 22:2 In the midst of the street of it, and on either side of the river, was there the tree of life, which bare twelve manner of fruits, and yielded her fruit every month: and the leaves of the tree were for the healing of the nations.


3 posted on 10/12/2007 3:07:37 AM PDT by HisKingdomWillAbolishSinDeath (Christ's Kingdom on Earth is the answer. What is your question?)
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To: 2ndDivisionVet
Came across this article also about the NHS.

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/main.jhtml;jsessionid=SHQQGGX5BOJOQFIQMFSFF4AVCBQOIVO?xml=/news/2007/10/11/ncdiff111.xml

About the high rate of C.diff in a couple of hospitals. Following the article are reader posts. The cleanliness at these hospitals doesn't sound much better than Cuba's.

4 posted on 10/12/2007 5:31:41 AM PDT by 3catsanadog (Vote for the person at the primaries; vote for the party at the election.)
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To: 3catsanadog

Sorry I don’t know what code to put at that link. I’m HTML-challenged.


5 posted on 10/12/2007 5:38:14 AM PDT by 3catsanadog (Vote for the person at the primaries; vote for the party at the election.)
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To: HisKingdomWillAbolishSinDeath

Your comments are accurate, but remember that even the peace that Jesus brings during His thousand year reign comes to an end when mankind rebells. Its seems that even a return to the paradise of the Garden of Eden is insufficient to cleanse the evil and sin in the heart of man.


6 posted on 10/12/2007 11:32:51 AM PDT by quadrant
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To: 2ndDivisionVet

One must understand about the Left: they want what they want, regardless of reason and evidence.
All the national health systems in the world could implode (as is the one in Great Britain) and the Left in this country would still want to impose national health on the American people.


7 posted on 10/12/2007 11:35:09 AM PDT by quadrant
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To: 2ndDivisionVet

This should be required reading for anyone who is falling for the socialized medicine scam.


8 posted on 10/12/2007 11:37:15 AM PDT by Route66 (America's Main Street - - - President Fred D. Thompson /"The Constitution means what is says.")
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To: 2ndDivisionVet
National Health Care means the government never has to say its sorry (when you die due to their malfeasance).

:-(
9 posted on 10/12/2007 11:44:22 AM PDT by cgbg ("I give you health care and I say 'no smoking'". "Yassah Miss Hillary.")
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