The Prague Post - Britain's public health service at 75: on life support?

EUR -
AED 4.268076
AFN 80.17125
ALL 97.810127
AMD 445.612262
ANG 2.079644
AOA 1065.560392
ARS 1479.635656
AUD 1.787429
AWG 2.091613
AZN 1.972956
BAM 1.958931
BBD 2.343136
BDT 140.875174
BGN 1.958906
BHD 0.438172
BIF 3458.261577
BMD 1.162007
BND 1.493044
BOB 8.018817
BRL 6.447862
BSD 1.1605
BTN 99.865491
BWP 15.677666
BYN 3.797817
BYR 22775.343894
BZD 2.331116
CAD 1.596069
CDF 3353.553428
CHF 0.932796
CLF 0.029219
CLP 1121.278613
CNY 8.347513
CNH 8.34732
COP 4673.779449
CRC 585.558628
CUC 1.162007
CUP 30.793195
CVE 110.441529
CZK 24.638041
DJF 206.658324
DKK 7.462969
DOP 69.814294
DZD 151.496752
EGP 57.398394
ERN 17.43011
ETB 161.061977
FJD 2.623108
FKP 0.865488
GBP 0.864986
GEL 3.148836
GGP 0.865488
GHS 12.097336
GIP 0.865488
GMD 83.105539
GNF 10070.486561
GTQ 8.904232
GYD 242.68791
HKD 9.119904
HNL 30.371722
HRK 7.536661
HTG 152.369447
HUF 399.092
IDR 18986.444655
ILS 3.906872
IMP 0.865488
INR 99.987188
IQD 1520.229921
IRR 48935.037157
ISK 141.799536
JEP 0.865488
JMD 186.044577
JOD 0.823792
JPY 172.420939
KES 149.933421
KGS 101.617943
KHR 4651.615237
KMF 494.422331
KPW 1045.77067
KRW 1615.120423
KWD 0.355074
KYD 0.967046
KZT 619.760619
LAK 25024.999722
LBP 103980.828741
LKR 349.729004
LRD 232.680926
LSL 20.778813
LTL 3.431106
LVL 0.702886
LYD 6.311332
MAD 10.517311
MDL 19.728298
MGA 5188.49417
MKD 61.658554
MMK 2439.024431
MNT 4167.268451
MOP 9.381996
MRU 46.164577
MUR 53.045943
MVR 17.886789
MWK 2012.29436
MXN 21.792276
MYR 4.932731
MZN 74.321417
NAD 20.778813
NGN 1775.035667
NIO 42.709921
NOK 11.943013
NPR 159.784586
NZD 1.953927
OMR 0.446792
PAB 1.160455
PEN 4.11668
PGK 4.875983
PHP 66.61205
PKR 330.626374
PLN 4.257482
PYG 8982.705737
QAR 4.231163
RON 5.074519
RSD 117.181463
RUB 90.612074
RWF 1667.730269
SAR 4.358622
SBD 9.643321
SCR 17.040197
SDG 697.783665
SEK 11.300725
SGD 1.493301
SHP 0.913155
SLE 26.551556
SLL 24366.717534
SOS 663.185712
SRD 42.857142
STD 24051.205886
SVC 10.15423
SYP 15108.241839
SZL 20.776013
THB 37.684282
TJS 11.093932
TMT 4.078646
TND 3.417963
TOP 2.72154
TRY 46.876772
TTD 7.877591
TWD 34.184055
TZS 3028.858595
UAH 48.584939
UGX 4157.645541
USD 1.162007
UYU 46.945037
UZS 14828.702057
VES 135.914186
VND 30398.112054
VUV 139.017731
WST 3.207295
XAF 657.032639
XAG 0.030483
XAU 0.000348
XCD 3.140383
XDR 0.817138
XOF 657.032639
XPF 119.331742
YER 280.450959
ZAR 20.698258
ZMK 10459.463396
ZMW 27.126409
ZWL 374.16589
  • CMSC

    0.0900

    22.314

    +0.4%

  • CMSD

    0.0250

    22.285

    +0.11%

  • RBGPF

    0.0000

    69.04

    0%

  • SCS

    0.0400

    10.74

    +0.37%

  • RELX

    0.0300

    53

    +0.06%

  • RIO

    -0.1400

    59.33

    -0.24%

  • GSK

    0.1300

    41.45

    +0.31%

  • NGG

    0.2700

    71.48

    +0.38%

  • BP

    0.1750

    30.4

    +0.58%

  • BTI

    0.7150

    48.215

    +1.48%

  • BCC

    0.7900

    91.02

    +0.87%

  • JRI

    0.0200

    13.13

    +0.15%

  • VOD

    0.0100

    9.85

    +0.1%

  • BCE

    -0.0600

    22.445

    -0.27%

  • RYCEF

    0.1000

    12

    +0.83%

  • AZN

    -0.1200

    73.71

    -0.16%

Britain's public health service at 75: on life support?
Britain's public health service at 75: on life support? / Photo: Susannah Ireland - AFP

Britain's public health service at 75: on life support?

Deeply loved but wracked by crisis, Britain's National Health Service (NHS) on Wednesday marks 75 years since it was founded as the Western world's first universal, free healthcare system.

Text size:

In a secular age, the NHS is the closest thing Britain has to a national religion -- devoutly cherished, with levels of public support higher than the royal family or any other British institution.

It was founded three years after World War II by a pioneering Labour government on the principle that everyone should access top-quality healthcare funded by general taxation, free at the point of care.

Prime Minister Rishi Sunak, whose parents were an NHS doctor and a pharmacist, paid tribute last week as he outlined a 15-year plan aimed at recruiting hundreds of thousands of new health staff.

"For every minute of every day of every one of those 75 years, the NHS has been kept going by the millions of people who've worked for it. To them on behalf of a grateful nation, I want to say: thank you," he said.

"I feel a powerful sense of responsibility to make sure that their legacy endures. And to make sure the NHS is there for our children and grandchildren, just as it was there for us."

Like Sunak's parents, immigrant staff were pivotal to the NHS's early growth, helping to remake the face of Britain itself in the decades after the war.

Its centrality to national life was underscored in a memorable dance sequence featuring NHS staff and patients during the opening of the London Olympics in 2012.

Justin Bieber remixed his hit "Holy" with an NHS choir for Christmas 2020, in a year when the public, clapping on their doorsteps, paid tribute to medics battling the Covid pandemic.

- Sickly state -

Sunak's new workforce plan, however, is recognition that the NHS is under unprecedented strain following the pandemic, even though the government spends nearly 12 percent of its budget on healthcare -- by far its single biggest item.

Demoralised doctors and nurses have been striking for better pay, an ageing and unfit population needs ever-more complex treatment, cancers go undiagnosed for lack of scanners, and hospitals are crumbling.

Sumi Manirajan, deputy chair of the British Medical Association's junior doctors committee, accused Sunak's Conservative government of failing to value doctors.

"And what that leads to is doctors leaving the country, going abroad, Australia, New Zealand, Canada, and actually it's the public that loses out," she told AFP at a protest rally by striking doctors.

"The government (ministers), they may use private health care but the ordinary citizen in the UK uses the NHS, relies on the NHS."

In a report for the 75th anniversary, the King's Fund charity compared the health systems of 19 similar countries and found Britain's in a sickly state.

It cited data showing the UK performed worst in fatality rates for strokes and second-worst for heart attacks.

The UK has a "strikingly low number of both nurses and doctors per person compared to its peers" and four times fewer hospital and intensive care beds than Germany, the report said.

But opinion polls show scant support in Britain for radical reform such as switching to a mixed model of funding, with patients paying via insurance for some of their treatment, as is the norm elsewhere.

Fully 93 percent of more than 3,000 respondents believe the NHS should remain free at the point of care, based on general taxation, according to the annual British Social Attitudes Survey last year.

But the authoritative survey also found a record 51 percent were dissatisfied with their quality of care, especially with waiting times for appointments to see general practitioners and hospital doctors.

- Terminal decline? -

Sunak has been resisting the medics' pay demands as he battles to get soaring UK inflation under control, while insisting his government is investing "record sums" in the NHS.

But the service needs to be modernised via better use of digital technology including artificial intelligence, he said on Friday.

Sunak argued that his workforce plan would make the NHS fit "for decades to come". But some on the front lines give a far gloomier prognosis.

"Right now, as a functional, universal public service, the NHS is failing," geriatrics consultant David Oliver wrote in The BMJ, a medical journal.

He warned: "It may not quite be in end-of-life care, or about to have its financial or political life support removed, but without immediate action and longer-term thinking it won't see its 85th birthday."

Y.Havel--TPP