- Jul 1, 2010
- 976
- 81
- 151
Dunkopf is right. I live in England and I would never swap our healthcare system for one which relies on private insurance. This would automatically exclude many millions of hardworking families in this country, from the excellent healthcare we enjoy. Of course it has to be paid for, in the national taxes, in an element called National Insurance, which pays for healthcare and a basic retirement pension which is about £110 a week currently (this is inflation linked). Where we differ from you is that unless we are self employed, we pay our taxes directly from our salaries in a 'Pay as You Earn' scheme. This includes our national Insurance contribution.
We also have the choice to pay for private medicine, if we choose, just as we can pay in for private pensions, and many companies have private health care and a pension scheme for their employees. If you never the income to do this you can be sure that the healthcare needs of your family will always be catered for.
A brief example of the National Health Service:
All hospital treatment - free
All citizens are registered with a community doctor - free
All visits to doctors - free
All medicine for children, students and retired people - free
All medicines for working people are charged at the rate of about 10 dollars per item regardless of cost
For my family, in the last two years, this has meant:
Two mammograms - free
Two early breast cancer operations - free
15 radiotherapy sessions - free
5 years of tamoxifen - free
Two MRI scans - free
6 x-rays - free
Change of pacemaker battery - free
And the best news of all - the birth and aftercare of one baby! - free (I must add that is within the whole family).
I am retired now, but I was a worker for most of my adult life, except for a couple of years bringing up small children. I have never earned a great wage, as I have worked in the community but my contributions have not been great as they are earnings related. My husband, who has earned a good wage, has contributed much more than me, but it has never been a burden to us, even in the years of bringing up our family, when I couldn't work. This is the beauty of the system, you pay according to your means, and receive the treatment according to your needs.
Could their be a fairer system ?
We also have the choice to pay for private medicine, if we choose, just as we can pay in for private pensions, and many companies have private health care and a pension scheme for their employees. If you never the income to do this you can be sure that the healthcare needs of your family will always be catered for.
A brief example of the National Health Service:
All hospital treatment - free
All citizens are registered with a community doctor - free
All visits to doctors - free
All medicine for children, students and retired people - free
All medicines for working people are charged at the rate of about 10 dollars per item regardless of cost
For my family, in the last two years, this has meant:
Two mammograms - free
Two early breast cancer operations - free
15 radiotherapy sessions - free
5 years of tamoxifen - free
Two MRI scans - free
6 x-rays - free
Change of pacemaker battery - free
And the best news of all - the birth and aftercare of one baby! - free (I must add that is within the whole family).
I am retired now, but I was a worker for most of my adult life, except for a couple of years bringing up small children. I have never earned a great wage, as I have worked in the community but my contributions have not been great as they are earnings related. My husband, who has earned a good wage, has contributed much more than me, but it has never been a burden to us, even in the years of bringing up our family, when I couldn't work. This is the beauty of the system, you pay according to your means, and receive the treatment according to your needs.
Could their be a fairer system ?