vtsnowedin wrote: So the NHS is better but it has problems of it's own including rising costs. Would you agree that the best health care system in the world that also bankrupted it's country or patients was of no real net value?
The NHS produces very good value for money, not least because the system is largely free from parasitical private companies. There are no shareholders making a profit out of it.
The long-term problem with it has nothing to do with the adequacy of the system of itself. It is partly the result of rising costs of available treatments (expensive new technologies and ludicrously expensive drugs) but mainly the result of a complete absence of demographic realism. The UK has no credible plan for dealing with all those people who were hoping for a long and comfortable retirement while the NHS foots the bill for their extensive medical requirements.
We have no idea what to do with all the old people, because the system was designed when most of the people who retired at 60/65 were dead within ten years. The real crisis the NHS faces is exactly the same as the pensions crisis, and I can see no solution to it.
The NHS is of very great net value, but the whole of our society needs to have an honest debate about how we are planning to support the ever-growing army of elderly persons. The future role of the NHS would be a central feature of that debate.
"We fail to mandate economic sanity because our brains are addled by....compassion." (Garrett Hardin)