No, absolutely not. Having seen private healthcare though I can completely see why people think privatisation is the solution.
Would you ever use private healthcare over the NHS?
Would you ever use private healthcare over the NHS?
No and I wouldn't want them to pay for me either. It's morally wrong on so many levels although as I said, I totally understand why people do it.Yes. I think telling medical professionals they can only work for the NHS would drive a lot of them away and remember that many of our medics aren’t from this country. There would be much more attractive places for them to go if we told them they could only work for the State. Using NHS resources for non NHS work is a huge no-no though.
I needed a diagnostic. My GP referred me to the local hospital but I paid £250 at a private hospital, had the diagnostic done 2 days after I was told I needed it and the doctor told me there and then what the result was. On the NHS I’d have had to wait over a month during which time my mental health would have gone massively downhill and then after attending the hospital I’d have had to book an appointment for the results which would have been two weeks later (and knowing what my local NHS is like, they’d have probably lost the results in transit)
Would you pay privately for a family member to receive medical care if it shortened the amount of time they’d be in physical pain or mental distress - or if it was likely to save their life?
I’m breaking the game to reply to this point but I really don’t think practitioners should be leading management. I’d rather they be treating patients than having their time taken up by management or giving them the extra stress of it. I think for most people, the medical profession is a vocation and for the majority their personality type is suited to serving patients and not necessarily managing an organisation.Yes management is needed but it should be practitioner led at all levels where possible.
I’m breaking the game to reply to this point but I really don’t think practitioners should be leading management. I’d rather they be treating patients than having their time taken up by management or giving them the extra stress of it. I think for most people, the medical profession is a vocation and for the majority their personality type is suited to serving patients and not necessarily managing an organisation.
Had you noticed that yes, I do? I've been interested in Scottish politics for a while partly driven by the fact that people my age can vote in Scottish elections and partly from a desire to be able to discuss things that matter to me politically from an informed standpoint.Kitkats. Yes! Especially a kitkat chunky
Do you like talking about political things?
I'm pretty sure that all state owned services aren't allowed to work in the private sector if only because that would be unfair competition. How the NHS is allowed to let its facilities be used for private practice is beyond me. Tax payers paying for greedy consultants to make money from the NHS? Needs to stop.Yes. Partly because I love hearing other people’s views
Do you believe that all services that work for the State should be excluded from working in private practice?
I was thinking more along the lines of, when you said consultants that work for the NHS shouldn't be allowed to work in private practice. I saw a similarity to lawyers that get paid by the State in Legal Aid, companies that repair roads, or even aviation back in the day.I'm pretty sure that all state owned services aren't allowed to work in the private sector if only because that would be unfair competition. How the NHS is allowed to let its facilities be used for private practice is beyond me. Tax payers paying for greedy consultants to make money from the NHS? Needs to stop.
I'm trying to think of which State owned services we have now other than the NHS but I couldn't think of any. I g00gled and Scottish airports came up.Do you think state owned services should be allowed to compete in the private sector?
I was thinking more along the lines of, when you said consultants that work for the NHS shouldn't be allowed to work in private practice. I saw a similarity to lawyers that get paid by the State in Legal Aid, companies that repair roads, or even aviation back in the day.
I wasn't sure when I responded yesterday but I checked and NHS can only allow its facilities to be used when NHS patients won't be impacted, and they charge for any facilities used by consultants to treat patients privately. A lot of the consultants apparently do the work either while on annual leave or outside their contracted hours and over weekends etc, so it's not like they're shirking their obligations to the NHS and the patients are being charged for the use of NHS facilities.
I'm trying to think of which State owned services we have now other than the NHS but I couldn't think of any. I g00gled and Scottish airports came up.
I'd have to say yes. Using the airport example, I can't see a compelling reason for why Prestwick couldn't be allowed to compete with Glasgow or Edinburgh.
I'm relying on G00gle but it says that Prestwick has been owned by the Scottish Government since 2013Airports are privately run and owned. They're regulated but that's an entirely different thing.
Why though?Still morally wrong though.
I'm relying on G00gle but it says that Prestwick has been owned by the Scottish Government since 2013
Why though?
Isn't it right to allow them the freedom to work for their contracted ours in the NHS and do what they want outside of those hours (while maintaining the obligations relating to conflict of interest etc, ofc)?
Yes. I blame @InkandtattsDid you have a boomer moment and forget to ask a question?