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Rationing and charges would destroy NHS principles

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Published Date: 22 June 2009
CARELESS talk costs lives and it may cost us our NHS. We are told an ageing population and rising patient expectations are placing inexorable demands on the NHS, but these claims have been contradicted by parliamentary enquiries.
To date, there has been too little scrutiny of where the cost pressures are coming from and how money is spent. The real inflationary pressures are the rising cost of pharmaceuticals, technologies and the exorbitant cost of new hospitals and GP surge
ries financed using private finance and equity.

In the UK, 12-14 per cent of all health service expenditure is on pharmaceuticals, but there has been too little public examination of why the prices charged for drugs and new technologies are so high.

Cost pressures also manifest themselves through the new charges for private finance.

The taxpayer, having bailed out the banks to the tune of hundreds of billions of pounds, is now being charged excessive amounts for hospital building so that the banks can rebuild their balance sheets.

Patient charges would not promote efficiency or fairness in the NHS. Charges would create a two-tiered system based on a patient's ability to pay.

The principle of the NHS is that all effective treatments should be available free at the point of delivery. This principle should be inviolate. Rationing will destroy it.

Advocating changes to funding and a reduction in services is a bridge too far. The solution is not to blur the principles and goals of the NHS by allowing the introduction of private funding and private health care.

• Professor Allyson Pollock is head of the Centre for International Public Health Policy at Edinburgh University.





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  • Last Updated: 21 June 2009 10:41 PM
  • Source: The Scotsman
  • Location: Edinburgh
 
1

Willie Mor,

22/06/2009 00:16:17
lets get our priorities right and cut health spending and ration care.

At least then we may be able to fund Trident, the National database and the ongoing wars in Iraq and Afghanistan.

2

The Former Mr. Angry,

Perth 22/06/2009 21:09:39
NHS principles are already all but destroyed in dentistry, which in any event used to charge patients. Now I pay £40 to have a checkup at a private dentist as no NHS one was available even. That has changed a bit recently but availability still cannot meet demand.

There's more to patient care than money which is why private patients prefer to enjoy their operations without C-diff or MRSA. Anyway NHS is not free. Those of us who do pay tax are being asked to funnel endless amounts of cash into a system which shows little sign of improving efficiency or effectiveness, while the listless idle drinking, drugged-up and smoking class and immigrants who have never contributed clog up A&E and beds and resources. We have to get real about what we can supply and to whom. Giving away expensive treatments to someone who has ostensibly come to the UK from Afghanistan as an asylum seeker for example may seem humane but just causes attrition of that scarce resource on an increasing and unjust scale. Still if it gets Broon votes that's all he cares about.

 

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