Godzilla1960 wrote:
Crosscheck wrote:
and we routinely feast on the horrors produced by the NHS
So....yeah...laugh it up Europe.
I guess we could ask the English what they think of their National Health Service.
Survey says...
92% said they were satisfied with their treatment
87% of General Practice users were satisfied with their GP
87% of hospital outpatients were satisfied with the service they received
70% of Accident and Emergency department users reported being satisfied
When asked whether they agreed with the question "My local NHS is providing me with a good service” 67% of those surveyed agreed with it.
Oh, the horror, the horror...
Right, right. It all looks so fantastic until you research the numbers. Taxes are higher there than here, roughly 55% of every single nations budget is dedicated to health care (numbers vary nation to nation, but that is the average as of 2008), Oh, whats that you say, they pay much more and it has a ladder climb of a staggering 1.4% annually, why yes, that is the case.
Oh,e well then, it appears as though those industrialized nations that are not communist really don't have the answer do they now, well, lets dig deaper, shall we? Why yes, yes we should.
Ok, lets take a simple knee replacement surgery for example, lets say on a 60 year old male, whats the wait time on this in those naitons, well Slesh, according to the numbers, that surgery is over 19 months on the back log list, as opposed to America, where it "was" only 5 months. Hmmmm.....starting to see a painful waiting process here, but no problem, were strong people, we can handle the pain during the wait, whats there success rate for such a surgery? Well Slesh, according to 2008 and "ALL" prior years records in health care, the United States had an average 80% or better success rate, including those rates at the earliest times for surgeries such as this, ok, what about these nations with nationalezed health care? Well Slesh, the run at a staggering 61% combined. WHAT? 61% COMBINED? Why yes Slesh, almost 90% of all procedures were developed here in the GOOD OLE US OF A. That would be directly contributed to the lack of funds available to new procedures within these other nations due to the cap put on spending because of the budgetary situation on "GOVERNMENT" run programs.
Hmmmm......you don't say. "Well no Slesh, I don't say, the statistical numbers however, do say, oh, and by the way, those numbers were collected by 29 individual studies including Oxford U., Harvard,, Princton, Paris U. etc....etc...
People by now should be getting the point here. There are pros and cons to both ways health care is run.