Hoover Attack wrote: ↑Fri Jun 28, 2024 9:10 am
They have to use it to get picked up off the street and brought into a hospital. But that’s it. That's why the NHS’s A&E provision is a cut above everything else they do.
The fact the rest of the NHS is not at the required standard is due to under funding. A deliberate choice because the wealthy and powerful don’t want to pay their fair share of taxes, they’d rather take out private healthcare for themselves and sod everyone else. If the private option wasn’t available to them, they’d be demanding the NHS was improved (for themselves, and therefore everyone by default).
Not disagreeing with your points in general, but not sure I agree that the A&E provision is a cut above everything else the NHS does. It's just that, as far as an A&E provisions goes, the NHS is still (for now) the only game in town.
The A&E provision is a disaster right now. I've had reason to visit A&E with family members several times in the last few years (including quite recently) and a 12+ hour wait is not uncommon, often with NHS admin f*cking up follow-up referrals. But that's mainly due to the sheer numbers of people being referred to A&E for minor issues because of the shambles of the GP system.
In fact, once you get past A&E and the life-threatening delays before you're referred to specialist units/consultants for various medial issues, the quality of care from the NHS
is brilliant. Private medical insurance is now the way to shorten the wait for accessing that care.
But, as I said, not disagreeing with the point that we'd see miraculous improvements across all areas of the NHS if the wealthiest had no choice but to use it too at every stage of their care.