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Share your dilemmas and get honest opinions from other Mumsnetters.

People would be happy to pay more tax if it went directly to the NHS

572 replies

Blackcats7 · 06/03/2024 02:54

I think people would be happy to pay more tax if it was guaranteed to go to the NHS.

OP posts:
Thread gallery
17
anonhop · 11/03/2024 13:50

endofthelinefinally · 06/03/2024 04:27

I could write a book about the disorganisation and waste in just one hospital I worked in. If you hadn't seen it you wouldn't believe it. That was without/ before the huge fraud that was discovered in the finance department. That was particularly galling for thise of us that were exhausted from all the unpaid overtime.

I'm the same. It was HORRIFYING. The trust I worked at kept shuffling people around keeping rubbish, lazy staff in jobs that didn't really need to exist. It created a minefield for the patients & total chaos. I have so many stories of total waste & pandemonium. The attitude of the management & non-clinical staff was APPALLING. No care/concern for patients.

Overall, we do need to spend more on NHS, but not until reform has happened.

Alexandra2001 · 11/03/2024 14:52

Overall, we do need to spend more on NHS, but not until reform has happened

I ve worked for many large national and multi national companies, the level of waste (sometimes fraud) is often incredible & i ve wondered how they managed to make any profit.

The NHS will also have examples of fraud and waste but Reform takes huge amounts of time, effort and money!! and will make little difference to patient care, e.g, in itself, wont produce more staff, equipment or buildings.

That "might" come later or might not... extra staff, which the NHS is desperate for, is the most costly thing they need, staffing costs are almost 50% of the entire NHS budget and we have far less staff than comparable health systems.
We could double the number of nurses we have and still have less than Germany.

HRTQueen · 11/03/2024 16:30

Yes but multi national companies are not spending tax payers money

if it becomes too much of an issue, shareholders unhappy will be looked into and changes made it’s almost impossible to make these sort of changes in the NHS

the waste in the NHS is eye watering I have worked for international companies in a range of industries I changed career and the waste I see in the NHS is on another level the costs of just maintaining out unit with everyday maintenance is eye water, our new IT equipment, new printers is so often not needed just a few examples

PerkingFaintly · 11/03/2024 17:34

Yes but multi national companies are not spending tax payers money

Wha....?

Many, many multi-national profit-making companies are spending taxpayers' money.

What do you think Capita, and Serco, and G4S, and ATOS, and Lockheed Martin, and Fujitsu... do?

Some of them have profit streams outside government, but others exist only to farm taxpayers. Because their contract is with the government dept which commissioned them ("Customer 1"), while the people who actually work at the sharp end or are service users ("Customer 2") have no say in the matter, there is a disastrous cosy network which provides jobs for the boys and girls while being awful for the country.

This doesn't stop being true when the contracts these multi-nationals have are in the healthcare sector. In fact isn't it Serco which has already managed to muck up a contract to provide GPs in London?

PerkingFaintly · 11/03/2024 17:38

Oh blimey. I just googled "serco gp contract".Shock

Spoilt for choice re Serco failures.

Just one eg:
'Disgraceful' Serco falsified GP out-of-hours figures
A FTSE-100 company that provides out-of-hours GP care for the NHS faked records hundreds of times to mask serious short-staffing, a damning report by the National Audit Office has found.
https://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/health/news/9913780/Disgraceful-Serco-falsified-GP-out-of-hours-figures.html

'Disgraceful' Serco falsified GP out-of-hours figures

A FTSE-100 company that provides out-of-hours GP care for the NHS faked records hundreds of times to mask serious short-staffing, a damning report by the National Audit Office has found.

https://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/health/news/9913780/Disgraceful-Serco-falsified-GP-out-of-hours-figures.html

TheDayBeforeYouCame · 11/03/2024 17:57

No we shouldn't give the NHS more money to waste. The whole service is inefficient and disorganised and there is zero accountability taken by the people who work in it for its failures. Change comes from within and they do not want to change. I've engaged with multiple different NHS services over the last 4 years - the lack of follow up from the cataract surgeon that resulted in my dad going blind, the appalling lack of any humanity in the care of either of my parents in A&E an then in the geriatric ward, the chaotic discharge procedures, the delivery of incorrect equipment and the refusal to collect it, the returns to reassess care needs which had been assessed only the week before, the shambolic mental health care for DD, the list goes on and on ... it was all appalling. And no amount of money is going to solve the problem of rude, disengaged staff who demand politeness and gratitude for barely doing their job, don't reciprocate and then resort to threats if you dare to complain. The NHS is nothing to be proud of, its an embarrassment.

ConsuelaHammock · 11/03/2024 18:12

No definitely not! It’s outlived its usefulness in its present form.

Alexandra2001 · 11/03/2024 18:45

HRTQueen · 11/03/2024 16:30

Yes but multi national companies are not spending tax payers money

if it becomes too much of an issue, shareholders unhappy will be looked into and changes made it’s almost impossible to make these sort of changes in the NHS

the waste in the NHS is eye watering I have worked for international companies in a range of industries I changed career and the waste I see in the NHS is on another level the costs of just maintaining out unit with everyday maintenance is eye water, our new IT equipment, new printers is so often not needed just a few examples

Private companies don't spend tax payers money? sorry but you re showing a huge amount of ignorance there.... Water, rail, defence, environment, heating, nuclear energy, steel, defence.... all these industries take huge amounts of money, often with zero over sight & at amounts that make the NHS look like remarkably good value for money...

2 broken down aircraft carriers and a dud nuclear deterrent... anyone?

...and thats before we look at bank bail outs and covid business loans...

Surely if you work in the NHS, you ve seen the private companies dealing with Neuro and crisis care in the community? all spending tax payers money!

The Kings Fund looked into waste and efficiency in the NHS and it compares favourably with european health services....

Sounds like you want a privatised health service... the USA fully private model is twice as wasteful as the NHS.

I've done a lot of work for NHS hospital trusts within IT and its pretty good, i could give examples of poor practice but i could do that with a major defence contractor too....

HRTQueen · 11/03/2024 21:30

Alexandra2001 · 11/03/2024 18:45

Private companies don't spend tax payers money? sorry but you re showing a huge amount of ignorance there.... Water, rail, defence, environment, heating, nuclear energy, steel, defence.... all these industries take huge amounts of money, often with zero over sight & at amounts that make the NHS look like remarkably good value for money...

2 broken down aircraft carriers and a dud nuclear deterrent... anyone?

...and thats before we look at bank bail outs and covid business loans...

Surely if you work in the NHS, you ve seen the private companies dealing with Neuro and crisis care in the community? all spending tax payers money!

The Kings Fund looked into waste and efficiency in the NHS and it compares favourably with european health services....

Sounds like you want a privatised health service... the USA fully private model is twice as wasteful as the NHS.

I've done a lot of work for NHS hospital trusts within IT and its pretty good, i could give examples of poor practice but i could do that with a major defence contractor too....

Edited

I should have said the companies I have worked for

no I do not want an American style healthcare this is always used to shut the argument down. We can look at France and Germany both far superior healthcare services than to the NHS

I am aware of the private companies within the NHS and like others who work/worked within the NHS have pointed out again and again as they do on these threads the waste within the NHS is eye watering I see it daily. Like I have said before I experience all the time how we are just making ends meet, how we struggle, how we can’t give the full service we want to, how teams are shifting about to save money, how we can’t provide the service we should be able to

the IT services I can’t even start on that the frustration this caused at times being told to log on the system to raise a job when no one was able to log in 🙄 is just one of them

we deserve better all of us attitudes are changing towards the NHS we have no need to be thankful poor service becuae it’s free at point of service and parties are realising that

BIossomtoes · 11/03/2024 22:01

Kendodd · 11/03/2024 21:54

WE used to have, what was widely regarded as the best health service in the world really not that long ago. Whatever could have happened?

NHS loses title of world’s best healthcare system | The Independent

14 years of Tory government might have something to do with it.

phoenixrosehere · 11/03/2024 22:06

Alexandra2001 · 11/03/2024 18:45

Private companies don't spend tax payers money? sorry but you re showing a huge amount of ignorance there.... Water, rail, defence, environment, heating, nuclear energy, steel, defence.... all these industries take huge amounts of money, often with zero over sight & at amounts that make the NHS look like remarkably good value for money...

2 broken down aircraft carriers and a dud nuclear deterrent... anyone?

...and thats before we look at bank bail outs and covid business loans...

Surely if you work in the NHS, you ve seen the private companies dealing with Neuro and crisis care in the community? all spending tax payers money!

The Kings Fund looked into waste and efficiency in the NHS and it compares favourably with european health services....

Sounds like you want a privatised health service... the USA fully private model is twice as wasteful as the NHS.

I've done a lot of work for NHS hospital trusts within IT and its pretty good, i could give examples of poor practice but i could do that with a major defence contractor too....

Edited

Sounds like you want a privatised health service... the USA fully private model is twice as wasteful as the NHS.

You do realise there are other models and countries out there other than the two extremes that are the US and the NHS. Right?

GogoGobo · 11/03/2024 22:12

Personally, I feel at my tax limit. I feel squeezed beyond belief with everything I pay so no, I don’t want to see more money go to the NHS because we now pay the highest tax rates for 70 years and have the most rubbish service from the NHS.

Alexandra2001 · 12/03/2024 06:35

no I do not want an American style healthcare this is always used to shut the argument down. We can look at France and Germany both far superior healthcare services than to the NHS

But those systems are no more "efficient" or less wasteful than the NHS i.e paying for treatment, then claiming the costs back again....
German system is also known for its bureaucratic administrative procedures.

They are also primarily both taxpayer (employer/employee) funded models

Fundamentally, European healthcare is better because they fund healthcare more than we do and they do that via higher taxes, France has an overall tax rate some 10% higher than the UK.

Similar with Germany too.

The UK on the other hand prefers a lower tax rate and shit public services.

On the USA system, the UK is currently heading down this route, with more and more private companies taking over care, no sign we are looking at a European model of regulated pooled insurance, which of course is just another expense on top of general taxation, which posters say they cannot afford....

Itsthemostwonderfultimeoftheyear · 12/03/2024 06:37

To be honest I just cannot afford to pay more tax. With cost of living increases and salaries not rising much there isn’t enough to go around as it is

bakebeans · 12/03/2024 22:46

I wouldn't bother! NHS here.
junior doctors approx £14.50 per hour. Apparently that's more than enough
Nurse salary according to the BBC over £35k a year.
amazing pension- actually my husbands private pension is worth more
Tory Government say more nurses are needed. Each trust has a budget to pay staff. If they spend more the government ask why. Think of your bills.

1 nurse to 7-8 poorly patients in some areas. Can you imagine looking after 8 people with severe dementia, cancer, heart attack, alcohol withdrawal causing them to have hallucinations and wee on another patients bed??
GP's burnt out due to relentless government targets or face a fine so leaving abroad.
everyone wants to leave as the pay is shit!
staff on their knees working often 50+ hour weeks and at least 10 hours without pay!
I'm currently looking at other jobs outside NHs. Shame as I used to love my job.

AllPrincessAnneshorses · 12/03/2024 23:00

QueenCamilla · 06/03/2024 04:47

I would love the health-care system that the European country I'm from has. Every clinic, GP surgery and hospital is essentially a shop. Part-financed via taxes to cover the most essential of emergencies, life-saving medications, child-health and needs of those absolutely unable to pay (though most of the time a monthly payment of a small amount over a long time period is still expected). The rest can be paid by the patient or the insurance fully or partially.
The prices in the clinics are reasonable (no one would attend otherwise) and one can get a simple full blood count test for £15 or anything of fancy and the latest science for a couple of hundred (there literally is a tick-box system of what you want, just turn up).
Epidural during labour is £100 on request. I regret not giving birth there as the NHS are atrocious.
You can see any specialist consultant for £80-£100.
It's a fiver to see your GP - no one misses appointments.

The only drawback is a serious illness with no insurance as the medications and the hospital stays would add up. But medical and dental insurances are very common and not USA style expensive. It's somewhere between NHS and private - best of both worlds and you get treated like a paying customer who can vote with their feet if need be.

The care was much worse when it was fully state financed like the NHS.

How were people persuaded to make the change?

1dayatatime · 13/03/2024 08:40

Itsthemostwonderfultimeoftheyear · 12/03/2024 06:37

To be honest I just cannot afford to pay more tax. With cost of living increases and salaries not rising much there isn’t enough to go around as it is

Generally on MN when posters are in favour of higher taxes it is tends to be for higher taxes on other people just not them or even better "tax the rich more" with the rich being defined as anyone earning say 50% more than them but most definitely not them.

EasternStandard · 13/03/2024 08:40

1dayatatime · 13/03/2024 08:40

Generally on MN when posters are in favour of higher taxes it is tends to be for higher taxes on other people just not them or even better "tax the rich more" with the rich being defined as anyone earning say 50% more than them but most definitely not them.

True

Muddywalks34 · 13/03/2024 09:04

I wouldn’t be, as a household we already pay £110k a year in tax and have private medical,
We feel fleeced enough

Alexandra2001 · 13/03/2024 09:30

Muddywalks34 · 13/03/2024 09:04

I wouldn’t be, as a household we already pay £110k a year in tax and have private medical,
We feel fleeced enough

Assuming you pay NI, you've had a very significant tax cut.

Didn't hear of exemptions for higher earners.

BIossomtoes · 13/03/2024 09:32

High earners only pay 2% NI on earnings over £50k in any case.

taxguru · 13/03/2024 11:04

BIossomtoes · 13/03/2024 09:32

High earners only pay 2% NI on earnings over £50k in any case.

Only if they're workers!! Pensioners and investors (buy to let, investment portfolios, etc), on high incomes don't pay any NIC at all!

BIossomtoes · 13/03/2024 11:15

taxguru · 13/03/2024 11:04

Only if they're workers!! Pensioners and investors (buy to let, investment portfolios, etc), on high incomes don't pay any NIC at all!

That’s why I said earners. Not people with unearned income.