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Michael Moore's "Sicko" is reputed to be very good, and is expected to ratchet up expectations for universal healthcare. Helen Evans knows something of the British system and sounds a cautioning note:
(Source: Helen Evans for The Chicago Tribune)
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Michael Moore's "Sicko" is reputed to be very good, and is expected to ratchet up expectations for universal healthcare. Helen Evans knows something of the British system and sounds a cautioning note:
Michael Moore's denunciation of America's health-care system is about to hit the silver screen. In the film's trailer, a desk attendant at a British hospital smiles while explaining that in Britain's National Health Service, "everything is free." But for free hospital care, Britons pay an awfully high price.You cannot get something for nothing. It's not like Monk hasn't tried.
... Upon launching its state health service in 1948, the British government promised that it would provide its citizens with all the "medical, dental and nursing care" needed, so that "everyone -- rich or poor -- [could] use it." To make good on its plans, the government nationalized more than 3,000 independent hospitals, clinics and care homes.
But today, after nearly six decades of attempting to make socialized medicine work, the NHS is in a perilous state.
Consider waiting lists. Across Britain, patients wait years for routine -- or even emergency -- treatments. And many die while waiting.
... Consequently, many Britons have turned to outside practitioners for treatment, and the private health-care market has boomed. Today, more than 6.5 million people have private medical insurance, 6 million have cash plans, 8 million pay out-of-pocket for a range of complimentary therapies, and 250,000 self-fund each year for private surgery. Millions more opt for private dentistry, ophthalmics and long-term care.
... Rationing, as history proves time and again, is always a recipe for horror.
(Source: Helen Evans for The Chicago Tribune)