It's Hunt at fault. Especially as it's not a pay rise being argued for, it's avoiding an effective wage decrease and change in working hours.
That's what happens when you are a "state-owned resource" - the state gets to decide your value.
I was referring to the NHS in general, there.
Right.
And the doctors are part of the NHS.
So . . . see above for the consequences.
That's the problem, yes.
So if you know the problem, why are you are complaining about a rather obvious and inevitable outcome, rather than pointing to it as a reason to change to a different system?
... so like any director of a company, only without the intrinsic profit motivation and requirement?
And a captive customer base, yes.
Precisely.
Also, it may come as a surprise, but the government deals with some organisational and financial matters. They do not, in fact, mess with the medical side of things; THAT is done by the health service itself (which is further regionally divided; it's not a monolithic entity)
Really?
Is that why the government was able to make the decision to eliminate a number of cancer drugs?
http://www.theguardian.com/society/2015/jan/08/nhs-costs-cancer-drugs-fund-review(I even used the Guardian instead of the Telegraph or Daily Mail for you.)
I guess the government DOES mess with the medical side of things.
When they say 24/7, they don't mean heart attacks. They mean normal appointments and routine surgeries--even though most of the support needed would be impossible without making THAT 24/7, which isn't being proposed. Tinkering with doctors' contracts isn't going to make every service available 24/7.
Okay, see . . here I'm baffled.
There is a problem with having normal appointments on weekends?
Middle of the night possibly, but then over here it is set up so you can get regular appointments about 8-14 hours of the day, depending on your specific area, and emergency rooms take up the rest. (I can actually get walk-ins around 12 hours of the day, 7 days a week, at the medical group my primary care doctor is.)
I can get x-rays and such with walk ins around 8 hours any weekday and 6 hours on Saturday.
Surgery is always going to be an issue due to the limited number of surgeons available, but . . .
That leads into your basic free market versus government managed monopoly issue. Yes, you pay more, possibly a whole lot more, in a free market, but you wind up with significantly greater access as well. Plus of course the emergency services remain in place.
Hyperbole and misconstruing the point. I have no idea where the jump comes from 'the people that investigated this thought about the reason for admission' to supposing that I'm advocating worse services or that people shouldn't use hospitals at the weekend. I'm for increasing spending, especially if this inane idea of all services operating 24/7 is carried on.
Hyperbole is the name of this game though:
You support single-payer government medicine or you want the poor to "die quickly".
You support free market medicine or you want everyone to "die equally".
Don't hate the player, hate the game.
And throwing more money at it won't solve the problem.
You will still have the same number of health care providers, with the same number of working hours, with the same amount of supplies. At best you could outbid another country and take some of their available health care pool, but you will still be reducing the amount of resources you have available for other purposes.
This is the research that started it. It's an increase of a 1.3% death rate to a 1.5% death rate. You're also more likely to die midweek than at the weekend, which would suggest the problem isn't with uneven service.
I'm sure there are several reasons for the disparity, and more ways to read the data to suggest anything and everything as the cause.
That's the problem with politically driven statistical analysis.
It is compounded when the government has a monopoly.