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Share your dilemmas and get honest opinions from other Mumsnetters.

How would you fix the NHS?

969 replies

PinkFruitbat · 21/10/2024 07:37

The Government is asking for ideas on how to fix the NHS.

https://change.nhs.uk/en-GB/

What would you do to fix it?

https://change.nhs.uk/en-GB

OP posts:
Thread gallery
16
Leniriefenstahl · 21/10/2024 13:21

Rummly · 21/10/2024 12:59

Are you a Labour supporter by any chance?

No, I don’t want anything weird.

What do you want? Some fantasy NHS that costs tuppence and delivers everything?

Nope. Have voted labour but not necessarily a supporter. Lived during the Blair years. Saw improvements in my job and care.
Do you trust governments to create a fair insurance system without fleecing ordinary people ?
Do you think the rest of the population would agree if Streeting suggested this ?
I guess there would be uproar in the DM immediately because essentially it’s just about politicking for the sake of it. The government tried to introduce means testing of WFA, just look how that went 😂

CoffeeCantata · 21/10/2024 13:23

TheSnootiestFox · 21/10/2024 13:16

I do not and will not ever feel 'grateful' for a wholly inadequate service that I have no choice in funding especially when it does not provide the service it tells me that I'm entitled to. I do hope that clarifies the stance of a significant chunk of the population!

Really?

I think you may be comparing the NHS to some kind of wonderful fantasy ideal, instead of absolutely ruddy nothing - which is the case in many countries.

I think people have lost sight of what it means to have health-care free at the point of use. It may not be perfect (and don't I know it!) but where would be be without it. I'm incredibly grateful.

I remember in the 60s my grandparents were still in awe of the free health-service. They didn't like to 'bother the doctor', partly because they were nice people, but also because they'd had to pay for everything until very recently.

We need to get this over to people and get them to value it.

So maybe we do need to make a small concession to human nature (people don't value what they get for free) and make a small charge for doctors' appointments - say a fiver, or just over the cost of a cup of coffee.

Purplebunnie · 21/10/2024 13:23

VioletCrawleyForever · 21/10/2024 08:25

Scotland so some differences but the same

Reintroduce prescription charges

NHS administration is stuck in past - still very paper and post oriented. Wastes so much time.

Charge for missed appointments.

Put GPs onto salaries (instead of self employed) and that way they can be required to work evenings and weekends

I’m not sure about charging for missed appointments. I received a very snotty letter regarding a missed appointment - an appointment I never received. I apologised to the staff when I did attend and said I hadn’t received the appointment either by letter, email or text and they said it happens all the time. So no I am not going to be charged for missing something I wasn’t aware of.

Admin in the NHS needs a real look at. I was receiving the copy intended for my GP as well as my own letter. I’m quite capable of scanning/taking the letter to the GP but not everyone is

Neurodiversitydoctor · 21/10/2024 13:24

Anjo2011 · 21/10/2024 11:03

Run it as a business. The amount of money wasted is astounding. Each department needs a thorough review by a team of people with a business outlook. There needs to be more care for the elderly, they can keep everyone alive longer but there is little to help with the things needed as one gets older. It is an astronomical task but it needs to be done.

OMG I knew this thread would be a tough read. Please educate yourself, half the problems are caused by the mental " internal market" created by Andrew Lansely. It doesn't work, it has never worked,it wil never work. Trusts in " special measures" or whatever for not fufilling their contract are the only game in town for huge swathes of the British population. The NHS work force has nationally agreed T&Cs and is highly unionised none of it fits a " run it like a bussines" model and when they try they are exploited by profiteering companies ( PFI anyone ?).

TheSnootiestFox · 21/10/2024 13:26

itwasnevermine · 21/10/2024 13:17

@TheSnootiestFox this is the issue.

People feel entitled to the service, but don't want to pay enough tax to fund it.

I pay private healthcare insurance so am more than willing to contribute! I sold my house a couple of years ago to pay for surgery to keep me mobile because the NHS wouldn't. We'd all be willing to pay more if we could guarantee decent provision. There's too many people not contributing though, that's the problem.

TheSnootiestFox · 21/10/2024 13:28

CoffeeCantata · 21/10/2024 13:23

Really?

I think you may be comparing the NHS to some kind of wonderful fantasy ideal, instead of absolutely ruddy nothing - which is the case in many countries.

I think people have lost sight of what it means to have health-care free at the point of use. It may not be perfect (and don't I know it!) but where would be be without it. I'm incredibly grateful.

I remember in the 60s my grandparents were still in awe of the free health-service. They didn't like to 'bother the doctor', partly because they were nice people, but also because they'd had to pay for everything until very recently.

We need to get this over to people and get them to value it.

So maybe we do need to make a small concession to human nature (people don't value what they get for free) and make a small charge for doctors' appointments - say a fiver, or just over the cost of a cup of coffee.

Nope, can assure you I'm not. Just fed up of a crap system not doing its job despite millions and millions being thrown at it.

Thommasina · 21/10/2024 13:28

EmeraldIsla · 21/10/2024 13:01

Something this far-reaching and beyond the term of any standing Government should always be cross-party. Much like pensions, no party wants to make the hard decisions and be blamed for it, so nothing gets done. It's short-sighted and achieves nothing.

Actually this makes very good sense.

TigerRag · 21/10/2024 13:29

CoffeeCantata · 21/10/2024 13:23

Really?

I think you may be comparing the NHS to some kind of wonderful fantasy ideal, instead of absolutely ruddy nothing - which is the case in many countries.

I think people have lost sight of what it means to have health-care free at the point of use. It may not be perfect (and don't I know it!) but where would be be without it. I'm incredibly grateful.

I remember in the 60s my grandparents were still in awe of the free health-service. They didn't like to 'bother the doctor', partly because they were nice people, but also because they'd had to pay for everything until very recently.

We need to get this over to people and get them to value it.

So maybe we do need to make a small concession to human nature (people don't value what they get for free) and make a small charge for doctors' appointments - say a fiver, or just over the cost of a cup of coffee.

And penalise people like me with long term, difficult to treat medical conditions?

ChardonnaysBeastlyCat · 21/10/2024 13:29

MereDintofPandiculation · 21/10/2024 10:15

Millions of people with no access to public funding register and use the system. That's a bit of an overstatement! Hansard 11 May 2023 says according to House of Commons Library, 1.6m people are given leave to remain wiithout recourse to public funds. So less than 2 million rather than"millions".

No, if someone is granted Settled Status then they have the right to use the NHS. You are confused there.

The ones I’m talking about are millions of illegal and semi legal migrants, and others with No Recourse to Public Funding, for example “tourists” who enter on a visitor visa and overstay because they work illegally. Or simply health tourists. Or elderly mum and dad who need dialysis and are here visiting. Or the cousin who is visiting and attending ante natal care and who will give birth here and then will stay with her baby when the council provides temporary accommodation despite the big fat No Recourse To Public Funding stamp.

Anyone can register with a GP and anyone can use the NHS, no questions asked.

It’s all on the Government website.

According to the supermarkets and the utility companies there are now over 80 million people living on the UK. Official statics are much lower. Make of that what you will.

TimTamTime · 21/10/2024 13:32

Reform IT = costs billions
Switch to online communication for appointments = excludes elderly people who are the heaviest users of the NHS & huge GDPR risk
More admin staff to answer the phone = more money on wages

The only way to save money (so we can spend on hugely expensive cancer drugs etc) is to either start charging so some services (like most of the EU) or stop providing services.

Social care fell apart years ago and is dragging the NHS down with it. It's easy to complain about cancelled surgery but if there is no bed because there is no social care for the person currently using it, what's your answer? A hotel doesn't work if what the person needs is carers or a nursing home. Fix social care and the NHS would be in a far, far better state.

Leniriefenstahl · 21/10/2024 13:32

The suggestions always seem to be about punishing people. Sacking them (employees) or making them more ‘efficient’ (work even harder with no breaks) or affecting those of us with long term health conditions (some of which are unavoidable I’ll agree but hey ho we’re all human).

Rummly · 21/10/2024 13:37

Leniriefenstahl · 21/10/2024 13:21

Nope. Have voted labour but not necessarily a supporter. Lived during the Blair years. Saw improvements in my job and care.
Do you trust governments to create a fair insurance system without fleecing ordinary people ?
Do you think the rest of the population would agree if Streeting suggested this ?
I guess there would be uproar in the DM immediately because essentially it’s just about politicking for the sake of it. The government tried to introduce means testing of WFA, just look how that went 😂

It’s amusing how many posters root for Labour and then say “but I’m not Labour”.

I think Streeting could be a very good health secretary if he makes changes and savings that Labour would find politically easier than the Tories. Bringing Milburn back was a good sign.

AlaskaThunderfuckHiiiiiiiii · 21/10/2024 13:38

@PhilosophicalCheeseSandwich you and me both but alas they continue to cut us to the bone in the community, when they are made to save money we are the first cut, made to see how we get on without a member of staff if they leave for months before recruiting, recruitment freezes at the minute and being told to rein in our mileage, not to claim from bases but where we start which can be 20 miles away so hitting staff in the pocket, we work rurally so there is only so much we can do

RoseAndRose · 21/10/2024 13:42

Rummly · 21/10/2024 13:37

It’s amusing how many posters root for Labour and then say “but I’m not Labour”.

I think Streeting could be a very good health secretary if he makes changes and savings that Labour would find politically easier than the Tories. Bringing Milburn back was a good sign.

This government wasn’t voted on because people support it.

it was voted in simply because they’re not the Tories.

So I think it’s easy to see why someone could have rooted for them in the election, whilst not really supporting their actual programme much if at all.

JenniferBooth · 21/10/2024 13:43

NHS is already saving money in very sinister ways by pressuring women to go through painful hysteroscopies without anasthetic.

Cost savings in link 😡

https://x.com/Tiffywren/status/1847558233155625343 Money saving coming above patient welfare

x.com

https://x.com/Tiffywren/status/1847558233155625343

CoffeeCantata · 21/10/2024 13:43

TheSnootiestFox · 21/10/2024 13:28

Nope, can assure you I'm not. Just fed up of a crap system not doing its job despite millions and millions being thrown at it.

I'm referring to the principle of a free health service.

I think the whole point of this thread is that there's a lot wrong with it. That's something everyone can agree on.

But I believe that getting people to stop taking it for granted is vital. The NHS is the staff and the hospitals, but it's also hugely the patients. And we need the patients to understand what's at stake, what can feasibly be done and what can't.

And for people trying to make it a party-political discussion - no government of any colour has managed to sort things out. There's so much more wrong thatn just funding.

CoffeeCantata · 21/10/2024 13:46

TigerRag · 21/10/2024 13:29

And penalise people like me with long term, difficult to treat medical conditions?

Most members of my family fall into that category.

I wouldn't mind paying a few quid if it would really make a difference. As I said, it's hardly more than the cost of a cup of coffee which every Tom, Dick and Harriet seems to be carrying around with them these days.

So what else could be done to improve funding and to make people value what they're getting? What I'm driving at is - people need to be appreciative.

Ameliasvocalfry · 21/10/2024 13:47

LadyGrinningSoul8517 · 21/10/2024 09:10

I wondered how long it would be before somebody blamed us fatties.

Look no further, folks. It's not sneaky underfunding to justify privatisation for the Tories rich mates, it's overweight people being too stupid to realise it's all those donuts they're eating apparently.

And us old people living far too long - how bloody inconsiderate of us Hmm

Mischance · 21/10/2024 13:48

I have just filled it in - it is remarkably vague. I can't imagine anyone disagreeing with the outlined aims, so I am not sure it moves us any further forward.

JenniferBooth · 21/10/2024 13:49

DoreenonTill8 · 21/10/2024 08:55

This, you only have to look on mn to see the encouragement for this though!
'Take your elderly relatives keys from the hospital so they can't get home!'
'Refuse discharge!'.

My dad died in a fall at home two weeks ago three weeks after being discharged so fucking shove it

Hatfullofwillow · 21/10/2024 13:50

gladrefrain · 21/10/2024 11:05

Well no. There are other factors. Increased medical advantages mean that the cost of treatments and drugs keeps increasing Improved medical advances, including neo natal care, means more people are surviving with expensive conditions ( which has a huge impact on social care too). People are living longer which means they need medical treatment for longer.

We are also a very unfit and obese society, which is partly an individual responsibility, but also due to people living busy lives working full time and looking after kids with reduced support structures and increased workload ( kids don't run free range and entertain themselves anymore), as well factors to do with design of communities etc. Cancer rates are increasing for reasons no-one is quite sure of, with cancer rates now at a terrifying one in two instead of one in three. and many cancer rates increasing in younger age groups.

Kids are less fit and more overweight. I was genuinely shocked at the weekend when I was at an activity centre I sometimes go to, and there was a bunch of 10 year old boys there. Only one had the high level of physical capability and mastery over his body I would expect of kids that age and quite a few had poorer physical skills than me (and I am in my early 50s). All of those kids should have been able to kick my ass, no effort. These kids live in an affluent area surrounded by woods and nature and hills, but they aren't playing in that environment to acquire those skills or capability in the way kids were in my generation. Its actually quite concerning for what that means for future health of the country.

Er, yes. Your anecdote doesn't quite match actual research and data.

We spend less on healthcare as a % of GDP than most other comparable countries and the second lowest of the G7, less than we did in 2020.

Set against the background of cuts to all our services, from scrapping surestart to our woefully underresourced MH services, we've created a downward spiral.

Something as simple as surestart for example was shown to have prevented 13,000 hospital admissions.

As for cancer rates rising, we have a reasonable idea why, and with 4 in 10 cases preventable we already know how to reduce cases.

TheSnootiestFox · 21/10/2024 13:55

CoffeeCantata · 21/10/2024 13:43

I'm referring to the principle of a free health service.

I think the whole point of this thread is that there's a lot wrong with it. That's something everyone can agree on.

But I believe that getting people to stop taking it for granted is vital. The NHS is the staff and the hospitals, but it's also hugely the patients. And we need the patients to understand what's at stake, what can feasibly be done and what can't.

And for people trying to make it a party-political discussion - no government of any colour has managed to sort things out. There's so much more wrong thatn just funding.

Actually I agree to an extent. I personally am not bothered about healthcare being free, it just needs to do its job, but if there were a system that was affordable to all that was providing half decent healthcare then that would be job done in my book. People need to make healthcare a priority and if 20 quid a month (or whatever) on a basic policy was mandatory then everyone would just pay it. But I absolutely refuse to be grateful for the utter shit show that is the NHS right now.

KaySam · 21/10/2024 14:00

I was sent a text message reminder about a hospital appointment the day after,I clicked I was going and took a screenshot of the appointment and my acknowledgement.
i turned up for my appointment to be told it had been cancelled,I showed them the text message,they got on the phone and 5 minutes later I got the cancellation text message.what a waste of time that was for myself and them.

I’ve also been poorly and was in hospital for 7 weeks,the last 2 weeks I was allowed home each night but had to go back each morning for IV antibiotics,I said they could take my bed for someone else but they weren’t allowed,So I was in that bay 2 hours maximum per day and it was unused the rest of the time.

i need surgery and have had all the scans and bloods needed now my surgery is being done at a hospital 10 miles away,so now I need all the scans again as they can’t access the previous scans and blood tests I’ve had.

they need a nationwide access to patients details and stop the bed blocking like I did.