[Skip to content]

Private Health UK
Quick Finder
Treatments
Facilities
Services
Search our Site
| We comply with the HONcode standard for trustworthy health information:
| verify here.
.

Reform pans NHS

Nurses for Reform
Offering a less rosy view of the NHS than Michael Moore is Helen Evans, director of Nurses for Reform, a pan-European network of nurses dedicated to consumer-oriented reform of European health-care systems.
 
For free hospital care, Britons pay an awfully high price. Just ask the nearly 1 million British patients on waiting lists for treatment. Or the 200,000 Britons currently waiting merely to get on NHS waiting lists.
 
Upon launching its state health service in 1948, the British government promised that it would provide its citizens with all the "medical, dental and nursing care" needed, so that "everyone, rich or poor, could use it." To make good on its plans, the government nationalised more than 3,000 independent hospitals, clinics and care homes.
 
But today, after nearly six decades of attempting to make socialised medicine work, the NHS is in a perilous state.
 
Consider waiting lists. Across Britain, patients wait years for routine - or even emergency - treatments. And many die while waiting.
 
Indeed, the NHS cancels around 100,000 operations because of shortages each year. In a growing number of communities, it is increasingly difficult for people to simply get an appointment with an NHS general practitioner for a regular check-up.
 
When it comes to keeping patients healthy, NHS hospitals are notoriously unfit. After admittance to state hospitals, more than 10 percent of patients contract infections and illnesses that they did not have prior to arrival. And according to the Malnutrition Advisory Group, up to 60 percent of NHS patients are undernourished during inpatient stays.
 
Consequently, many Britons have turned to outside practitioners for treatment, and the private health-care market has boomed. Today, more than 6.5 million people have private medical insurance, 6 million have cash plans, 8 million pay out-of-pocket for a range of complimentary therapies, and 250,000 self-fund each year for private surgery. Millions more opt for private dentistry, ophthalmics and long-term care.
 
Meanwhile, despite the state's continued claims that it can deliver quality health care to all, government ministers are increasingly willing to quietly outsource health care to the private sector. In other words, instead of directly providing health care through the NHS, the British government is shifting to simply paying the bills.
 
In 2000, Tony Blair's government authorised the treatment of state-funded patients in private hospitals for the first time. More recently, the government has made it clear that it would like all NHS hospitals to be recast as Independent Foundation Trusts able to attract private investment.
 
But even with these efforts, the British government has found it hard to cover its expensive obligations. So in addition to waiting lists, substandard care and increased outsourcing, the government has adopted outright rationing to control costs.
 
Through a concept called "Health Technology Assessments" the United Kingdom now empowers government-appointed experts to dictate which drugs, procedures and treatments are available for public consumption. Charged with controlling costs and watching the bottom line, these bureaucrats are expected to save money - not lives.
 
Already, this system has barred the purchase of Herceptin, a lifesaving breast-cancer drug. Alzheimer's patients have had trouble obtaining Aricept, a drug that improves cognition in those afflicted with the degenerative disease. The criteria for these denials of care are kept from the public. And patients who could be saved needlessly die. Rationing, as history proves time and again, is always a recipe for horror.
 
That is the view of Helen Evans, Director of Nurses for Reform, a pan-European network of nurses dedicated to consumer-oriented reform of European health-care systems.
 
Private medical insurance: News update: June 2007
 
Related links