No longer-care

Friday, August 14th, 2009 04:35 pm
caddyman: (Default)
[personal profile] caddyman
I have been following the debate over healthcare American style vs healthcare UK style with detached interest. Initially I thought it would grab my attention, particularly when I read the rather bizarre editorial in the Investors’ Business Daily that suggested that Professor Stephen Hawking wouldn’t have stood a chance if he’d had to live in the UK and be treated by the NHS. This editorial has now been amended , but it still reads as a rather alien argument to European eyes.

A lot of emotional energy has been expended by American conservatives in attacking ‘socialised medicine’1 and British supporters defending the NHS and the surprising thing is how little information there is in the argument. It is all contention; neither system is anything like as bad as its opponents imagine and neither are they as wonderful as their proponents would paint them.

Trying to make sense of it all has left me bewildered; I can’t find an account I can understand, much less a source I trust on the pros and cons of either system that isn’t soaked in dogma and rhetoric. I conclude from this that people would simply rather argue than face up to the realities that it all needs reforming in each country and that, unpalatably, someone somewhere is going to have to pay for and administer it. The only clear contention is that no-one seems to think they can afford what they think their citizens are entitled to.

Today’s Times has an interesting opinion piece. It’s the finances of the situation that scares everyone, apparently.

There was an excellent cartoon in yesterday’s Times that pretty much summed it up. I have just managed to find it by devious means...

(no subject)

Date: 2009-08-15 06:21 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] mr-h-r-hughes.livejournal.com
What made me baulk was this guy on the BBC (he was at one of these protest things in the US) who was insulting not only the NHS but the entire British public to the British reporters face and thught that was an acceptable way to make his point. I bet if the reporter had given back a fraction of what he'd got he'd have been surrounded by yelling Americans - Semmingly criticismis good for one and not the other.

Just to finish: No NHS = No me, I'd almost certainly be dead without it so I intened to take all this NHS bashing quite personally.

(no subject)

Date: 2009-08-15 09:05 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] ladkyis.livejournal.com
Oh I agree with that! I owe my life to the NHS. doctors and nurses put up with so much critisism from people who also wouldn't be here without the NHS. It seems to be the "British" thing to do, complain about a thing and knock it to the ground for small things when there is so much to praise. Mind you, the NHS could do with losing a layer or two of management

I can't comment on the USA system because I have never experienced it

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