I am generally pretty despondent about the standard of the debate between politicians, and in most of the MSM and even large parts of the 'blogosphere, as most people appear to think that there is a stark choice between a "free at point of use" State-monopoly NHS and a US-style system (that by all accounts appears to be just as awful, except for different reasons), while completely overlooking the vastly superior models in other European countries (and many other places in the world), the key to these being a complete separation of the 'funding' and 'provision' sides.
I'm happy to say that I stumbled across a few more people who have grasped this basic point, and hence addressed each issue separately today.
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Nigel Sedgwick kicked off his comment on a fairly indifferent post on the Adam Smith Blog with this:
On the issue of the NHS, there are at least two very important and entirely separate questions.
Firstly, there is the issue of whether we should have a universal welfare system for healthcare (beyond just accident and emergency). With such a welfare system, payment is made as currently in the UK, through taxation according to income, with equal benefit accruing to every resident citizen (and to many other residents beside), irrespective of income and of tax paid.
Secondly, there is the question of whether that healthcare should be provided through hospitals run entirely by central (or other) government, or whether there should be an insurance based system (as with current private healthcare) with hospitals run privately or by charities (and perhaps also by government), with patients freely choosing which hospital to use...
And follows this up with his own very sensible suggestions and illustrations of how it could work, and how similar systems work in other countries.
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Charlotte Gore had this to say:
The real debate comes into the nitty gritty of who runs the hospitals and employs all the doctors and nurses. It’s here we’ve got room for manoeuvre to make the NHS better. For example, why does the state need to run all the hospitals? The answer is that it doesn’t. The chapter on health care in the Orange book made a very compelling case for an insurance model, where each individual treatment is paid for by medical insurance and the money goes to whomever the patient chooses to carry out the treatment for them - rewarding good efficient hospitals and seeing to it that the people running bad hospitals get fired.
You can have multiple insurance providers competing with each other - in fact that’s almost certainly essential. You can have private hospitals, too. All of them can be private, in fact. The difference is the state would only get involved to subsidise people’s insurance premiums when they can’t afford to pay them.
In other words, you can radically change the way medical treatment is provided without removing the basic ‘universal, free at the point of use’ element. The rewards from such changes are obvious - the cost of medical care should come down and the quality of care should go up. If we look at the Singapore model and the Dutch Model we can see how these sorts of systems do deliver better outcomes...
I'd mark her down for the idea that the state would only subsidise insurance payments for lower income people; that smacks of means-testing to me, a particularly spiteful form of taxation on anybody who does their bit to stay out of poverty - such payments should be universal or not at all, but apart from that, good stuff.
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Finally, Subrosa Blonde went into some detail on how the German system works (and why it's better):
There are those who say '[The NHS is] an entity admired the world over', what nonsense. Which other country has adopted the British system of healthcare? None. If it was so admired surely there would be at least one or two.. Let's get one fact straight; it is not free, but free at the point of delivery. It is paid for by NHI contributions from those who work and further subsidised by the treasury (taxpayers)...
I doubt if many who 'love the NHS' have ever had the (mis)fortune to use the healthcare system of any other European country because if they had, they would realise the NHS is failing in many ways and it is by no means perfect. We have some of the worst results for the treatment of cancer and heart disease in Europe and we (parts of Scotland in particular), have the worst results for longevity. Other countries have similar social problems yet they provide better healthcare.
In Germany for example, blood test results are usually available within 24 hours. My GP here tells me to telephone in a week. There is no extensive waiting time for specialist appointments in Germany where 90% of the population contribute towards around 1,000 semi-private, fiscally independent, sickness funds (only 10% use private commercial insurance). The premiums are calculated on an 'ability to pay' basis and joining a fund is compulsory...
The NHS is Britain is now nearly 10% of GDP, a similar figure to Germany. So often we hear that the present problems within the NHS are caused by the increasing elderly in our population: 15.5% of Germany's population are over 65 with the UK's just slightly higher.
I have used the example of Germany because I have experience of their healthcare system and its quality. It still surpasses the best Britain can offer by way of results and it is not as expensive as the figures bandied around by politicians. It is not my intention to suggest we adopt the same system as Germany or any other European country, but we need a debate about healthcare...
Billions of pounds have been poured into a healthcare system in past years and we see little improvement by way of results. Of course we have some shiny new hospitals but it is the treatment which matters. If we want the treatments that produce the best results, we have to look and listen to those who work in our system, medics and nursing staff - they know what is needed, not politicians. It is the job of politicians to decide the best way to fund a system without interfering in the running of it.
I'd mark her down for suggesting that National Insurance contributions (about £80 billion a year) pays for the NHS (cost > £100 billion a year), because aren't National Insurance contributions also supposed to pay for old-age pensions (about £70 billion a year)?, and for the fact she doesn't seem to emphasise that all health providers in Germany are competing (on quality rather than on price, of course).
Sure, apart from GPs and small practices which are owned privately, German clinics and hospitals are usually owned by insurance companies (particularly health insurers), by local councils, universities, trade unions, churches or charities, but they are still competing for the same patients, and that is the main thing.
A language of our own
37 minutes ago
16 comments:
how the German system works (and why it's better...
It isn't better. In the WHO rankings it's 25th while the UK is 18th.
http://www.photius.com/rankings/healthranks.html
The rest of this post is similarly accurate.
That list was last compiled in 2000, and neither you nor I know what the criteria are.
Perhaps I should have quoted the letter from the Saturday Times explaining why the French system was better (as France came number 1 in that list)?
The 'left' are desparate. They entirely misquoted Hannan, whose remark was very clear that he would not recommend the NHS style system to the Americans. If you read The Plan he has already set out his ideas, so it is a non story.
The quality of the debate has declined because the left have no logical argument for retaining the nationalised health care 'system' - aka the NHS. You will not get a decent debate on this anywhere.
Yet again the left demonstrate their contempt for people, democracy and freedom by acting like the fascists they are and deliberately not engaging in debate but seeking to close it down. They are despicable.
It is paid for by NHI contributions from those who work...
From those who work .... yes.
I wrote the draft for UKIPs healthcare policy paper just before this whole thing erupted. Happy to say it recognises precisely this separation of functions!
More points for me again.
UK healthcare spending is 8.4% of GDP, whereas German healthcare spending is 10.4% of GDP. And there's no clear evidence (note: whining that Germany is awesome and the UK is crap is not evidence) that the German system is better.
That's my argument for the NHS right there: it provides a service that isn't demonstrably worse than the German system at a lower cost. Nothing to do with ideology, just pragmatism.
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John B,
Let people opt out of paying for and receiving the NHS and lets see that NHS demand...
Extortion funded treatment rationing with the state running the hospitals too is by far the worst model if you want to survive.
It's why we call it the national death service.
Extortion funded treatment rationing with the state running the hospitals too is by far the worst model if you want to survive.
That would be true if the UK's death rates were significantly higher, median life expectancy significantly lower, etc, than those in other countries with privately run hospitals.
They aren't. Hence, you're talking bollocks.
Perhaps I should have quoted the letter from the Saturday Times explaining why the French system was better (as France came number 1 in that list)
I would certainly be interested in proof rather than assertion, so bring it on.
As to Germany, the Commonwealth Institute Report of 2007 [1] confirms that the British system is better than the German. It ranks the UK first, Germany second and the USA a very definite last out of the six countries surveyed. The table ES-1 on page viii puts the UK ahead on 7 out of 11 indicators, including 3 out of 4 indicators of quality and also on efficiency, equity and cost.
Why do you think there no outcry in Germany over their inferior healthcare?
[1] http://www.commonwealthfund.org/Content/Publications/Fund-Reports/2007/May/Mirror--Mirror-on-the-Wall--An-International-Update-on-the-Comparative-Performance-of-American-Healt.aspx
One of the problems with the NHS arguments is that we all use numbers supplied to us by one interest group or another. And the State provided stats have zero credibility.
If you want the NHS as it is you are content with a communist system. It is top down producer driven rationing funded by coercion, or if you go on refusing to pay your taxes, ultimately violence by the State.
Such a system will be apparently cheap on international comparisons. The reason for this is that it exploits its employees. Plus the costs are massaged by public bodies keen not to disclose them.
It will though, work, to an extent. Treatment will be supplied and people will be looked after. Man is compassionate and the average staff in the service reflect that view.
It will also overcharge its customers. It may not do this in cash terms but do so by waiting times, wasting patients time, overpaying staff with high leverage (doctors and bureaucrats), bad resource allocation and arbitrary treament judgements, and delivering less than international average outcomes.
All of this is easy to massage and hard to measure accurately, because there is no transparent price structure.
An entirely free market system - which I would support - will, in the short term, exclude from care many people, until compassion and charity kicks in again. Barts, a hospital I know a bit about, had large endowments pre nationalisation which it used to treat the East End poor, often FOC.
If you want a combination system so that at all times everyone can access treatment then you need some form of universal insurance, but with the providers privately owned and run and competing.
Make the money follow the patient. Do not give it to the bureaucracy.
@Lola, so the NHS both exploits and overpays its staff?
(also, if you refuse to accept the ONS's figures, that's clearly a sign that you're a paranoid loony rather than anything else: there's no evidence *at all* that they're not honestly compiled, even if they're often PR'd and quoted in dishonest contexts. Politicians are, generally speaking, liars; professional statisticians who are also civil servants are generally not).
@JohnB "@Lola, so the NHS both exploits and overpays its staff?" Easily done, it overpays a fortunate few and exploits an unfortunate many.
Not that I agree with Lola, who appears to advocate a US-style system: any system where those people who are in charge of making you well (the doctors) have a direct financial incentive not to do so is going to be expensive, both in money and health terms.
To return to your original point: the fact that the NHS is no worse and cheaper than the German system, isn't an argument for the NHS, the NHS still could be crap, it would just be that the German system was more so.
Lola,
Please read the following article:
http://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/americas/the-brutal-truth-about-americarsquos-healthcare-1772580.html
The American system is Capitalism in its purest form. Until a few weeks ago every libertarian in the Western World held this system up as a model of quality and choice.
Healthcare in the US absorbs 16% of GNP and covers 80% of the population. In the UK it is 8.4%. with universal coverage.
Read even the one page I quote of the Commonwealth Institute report above. You will find it a swingeing indictment of the mess that is the American system. The US spends 7.3% of health expenditures on administration and the UK 3.3%. Capitalism is supposed to minimise costs and maximise outcomes, so how come the UK beats the US on nearly all measures of the quality of care plus access, equity and efficiency?
Calling the NHS 'Communist' is just a silly McCarthyite smear. Our system works much better that Libertarianism allows for. That is because Libertarianism also does not work. The sick do not want to be told their treatment is ideologically sound, they want to get well.
Norman, I wholeheartedly agree that the US system is completely shit. So what? That is an irrelevance. I have never suggested we should copy it.
The point is, are there any measures that we could take to improve the NHS at no extra cost? Why shouldn't we copy the best bits from other European countries?
On the 'funding' side and 'universal entitlement' side, I think we do quite well. (it would be nice if patients could top-up their treatment with private payments for extras, that's a whole 'nother topic).
It's the 'provision' side that troubles me - the idea that there can be only one state controlled monopoly provider with no accountability - if they f*** up then the patient might get compensation ... at the expense of the taxpayer! Providers bear no personal or commercial risk.
The American system is Capitalism in its purest form. Until a few weeks ago every libertarian in the Western World held this system up as a model of quality and choice.
Against tough competition, Norman seems to have come up with two of the most stupid comments that could possibly be made about the US healthcare system.
Which is a shame, because his study cited in his first link is a clear indication that the UK system is, in fact, one of the best.
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