Question:
Is this really the kind of "healthcare" you want?
anonymous
2010-03-18 04:50:52 UTC
http://www.burtonreport.com/InfHealthCare/BritNatHealthServ.htm

The British National Health Service

There exists in England today a sometimes uncaring, often unresponsive and typically disrespectful health care system. This system, as well as other global socialized systems, not created in regard to the patient's best interest, continue to be considered as worthy of emulation by many in the United States government. This continues to be a very much ill-advised initiative. The latest "buzz" in health care is "evidence-based medical practice." Well, let's examine the evidence:

There is little question but that the American health care system is inordinately expensive. Perhaps value is being received because longevity and quality of life have progressively increased and patient satisfaction remains high. There is also little doubt, however, but that we could do a much better job of improving service and decreasing overall cost by replacing HMOs with MSAs (Medical Savings Accounts) and getting serious about a paradigm shift to a truly preventive mode.

Before rushing to adapt another failed system the United States needs to carefully assess what we have now. "Queuing-up" has been part of the British persona for many decades. It's not, however, part of the American mind-set. Standing patiently in line for rationed goods and maintaining a "stiff upper lip" have been an unenviable "badge of courage" which has been the signature of our British cousins in the past. There is also an almost unique phenomenon in Britain which relates to the remarkable degree of trust automatically given (traditionally) to all professionals (government, law and medicine). In health care this explains a long-time supercilious attitude toward patients not counteracted by appropriate medical oversight. The really tough question for the new millennium is: how long will England continue to tolerate the chronic disrespectful behavior and continually declining quality and service of its "Health Service"?

The British prescription for health care continues to be typified by the phrase "Take A Seat." There is a remarkable complacency among a population which readily accepts the notorious British National Health Service (HNS) waiting lists for necessary hospital treatment. As the 20th century ended there were 1.12 million ever-suffering souls patiently waiting for needed hospitalization. This appears to be the price for "free care. One usually gets what one pays for. There is no doubt but that disabled Americans would be a great deal more impatient regarding their desire for prompt quality service than our British cousins.

The British Health Service continues to announce that the official list of those waiting for care is shrinking. This is simply not so; what has happened is that waiting lists to get on waiting lists have been created. After waiting to be seen by a family physician a British patient incapacitated with a spine problem may have to linger for more than a year to see a specialist. It is up to the specialist to determine the urgency of the case and to order any specialized tests. After the wait for the tests and the results (often a process of months) the next wait, of about a year, for surgery begins. Are things getting better? As of May, 2001 all indications were that the British National Health Service continued to "languish from bureaucracy, demoralization and capricious medical fads" (clearly not a formula for success). ( Lawlor S: Britian's Nationalized Medicine Needs Doctoring, The Wall Street Journal Europe, May 3, 2001).

Are things better in Canada? A 1998 study by the Fraser Institute located in Vancouver suggests not. Fortunately our Canadian neighbors have the opportunity to opt-out and "escape" their Federal Health Program by bolting across the border. On August 30, 2001 the Wall Street Journal reported that the British National Health Service had nearly one million patients waiting for treatment (40,000 of these waiting for surgery for over a year) and they have officially announced that henceforth the NHS will start paying patients to travel across the English channel for treatment in the European Union countries.

Socialized health care systems typically address the best interests of the state rather than the individual. The urge by these political entities to cling to unworkable and discredited policies is the stuff of legend. Tight financial controls in Japan have kept their medical costs to about 7% of their Gross National Product (GNP). The Japanese, however, also only get what they pay for. In the United States in 1996 26,200 patients were treated with defibrillators as a life-saving device. Japan (with half of the United States' population) treated only 100 such patients because such devices are rare in Japan. Many other important medical devices such as cardiac stents and other sophisticated implants are also not usually available. Because of artificially low, government mandated, physician
Six answers:
anonymous
2010-03-18 04:56:23 UTC
By careful Listening - I've determined that:



It doesn't FREAKING MATTER - what kind of HEALTH CARE *I* want.



Obama, Pelosi, Reid - and his liberal administration KNOW BETTER what kind of HEALTH CARE we want. They know better than us - why the government - despite the abject FAILURE of every other PROGRAM - can do this better, cheaper and increase access...



The only thing WRONG with OBAMA'S plan is... WE'RE TOO FREAKING STUPID to understand why this is good to us... and although he's spent more time SELLING THIS BILL than any other president in 2 terms has spend trying to sell ANYTHING... He, the great communicator, has STILL FAILED.



Could it be - that it really is not all that great?



Nah... Obama will tell us what to think.
anonymous
2016-05-31 15:55:41 UTC
Lexicon Results for miyn (Strong's H4327) Hebrew for H4327 מין Transliteration miyn Pronunciation mēn (Key) Part of Speech masculine noun Root Word (Etymology) from an unused root meaning to portion out TWOT Reference 1191a Outline of Biblical Usage 1) kind, sometimes a species (usually of animals) Goups of living organisms belong in the same created "kind" if they have descended from the same ancestral gene pool. This does not preclude new species because this represents a partitioning of the original gene pool. Information is lost or conserved—not gained. A new species could arise when a population is isolated and inbreeding occurs. By this definition a new species is not a new "kind" but a further partitioning of an existing "kind". Authorized Version (KJV) Translation Count — Total: 31 AV — kind 31
erok4444
2010-03-18 05:16:11 UTC
Well obviously Mr. Charles V. Burton, who is a specialist in Neurological Surgery, is also obviously a specialist in health care reform ... NOT! Also, Mr. Burton, who is from Minnesota for crying out loud, is no expert in British health care. That would be like me commenting on the feelings associated with giving birth, being a guy.



He is just in the top 1% of wage earners and wants a tax break while the rest of us get screwed. I'll believe a hack web page like the one you provided when monkeys fly out of your a$$.



Stop going to these propoganda websites that brainwash you against your own self-interests. Think for yourself, damnit. There is a reason why there is a correlation between the level of education one has and which party they are likely to vote for ... get a clue.
anonymous
2010-03-18 05:08:55 UTC
What rubbish. My dad has been treated twice for two different cancers, I have had broken bones fixed received excellent dental care, all on the NHS with minimal waiting. Some people do have to wait for non-urgent treatment, but when they get it it won't bankrupt them and they won't be turned away because they can't afford it. Oh and they always have the option of getting private care or insurance if they want.



I have the option of private health care from my employer, but decline it because the NHS has always been so good that it's not worth me paying tax on the benefit.
A Tiny Ripple
2010-03-18 05:04:39 UTC
liberals dont suggest a government RUN health care system. liberals just want to eliminate the middle man by letting taxpayer money go directly to health care (i.e. medicare, french system, etc)
anonymous
2010-03-18 04:56:03 UTC
No its not


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