Well I'm totally against privatisation and would like to see the last 20 years worth of PFI 'outsourcing' privatisation reversed.
My reasons are simple, profit motive and monopoly. On the one hand thank god the days when a local doctor had a free hand to charge whatever he liked. Medical emergencies are both time critical and essential for the recipient and their family. Nye Bevan had a simple solution to the medical profession's resistance. "I will stuff their mouths shut with gold".
It strikes me that the modern NHS, or which I'll happily admit to knowing little about, has a real problem with change. On the one hand all medical practitioners are required by their profession to maintain their skills up to date, change is built into the very nature of the business as drugs and techniques improve. This is quite enough for any profession, and as someone who works in the constantly changing IT industry I'll vouch for it first hand.
Hence I suspect if you added political meddling to my industry the results would be shocking. I'm sure most people are aware of instances without in depth knowledge however it was roughly explained earlier in the thread. If you ask for a house to be built, then ask for changes once it is finished, you'll be paying through the nose for them.
Apply this to the NHS where pointless politicians who have never managed a welk stall decide that they need x % reduction in y by May 2015... The results must be easy to predict. Add in constant reorganisations forced by the politicians which are barely finished before the next begins and I think I can see nothing but problems with no easy solutions.
Frankly we need to take control of the NHS away from these shysters, and their lackeys in middle management.
Bear in mind that every time the government increases taxes they bring in far less revenue than they expect. This is only logically because we are way past the peak of the laffer curve. Increasing taxes for the NHS is a noble aim, but I suspect the beneficiaries are not the nurses but the corporations. Some time ago I was rather shocked to hear that despite their purchasing power drugs cost more to the NHS than they did on the open market. Instead of being an economy of scale the drug companies had realised that they had to buy, and increased their rates accordingly.
I don't think I've written anything contentious, however I realise that I haven't proposed any solutions.
Frankly other than directly electing people who are licenced by the BMA ( as in doctors and nurses) to oversee the NHS and stating their priorities and direction in manifestos I can't think of any. So we would either have to have parliament stuffed with doctors or something separate would have to be set up.
One thing is for sure though, I trust the medical staff. I just think their problem lies in Westminster.