Accountable;906899 wrote: That's what Jester is setting up: taking care of the costs ahead of time so he doesn't have to worry should he become ill. Others do the same thing by paying an insurance company to do the same thing. You pay your government instead. The only difference is the negotiator. [eta] and who actually pays.
Actually the payer is the same i.e the individual- either as a taxpayer or as a subscriber to a private company. I would put it to you there is a fundamental difference in approach but it's not one we are likely to agree on and labouring the point is getting nowhere.
You might find this of interest as indicative of the very different attitudes we have in the UK-or at least in part of it.
http://www.theherald.co.uk/news/news/di ... stions.php
In her address, Ms Sturgeon said: "I think there is a battle of ideas going on about the future direction of healthcare.
"A battle between the values of the market, of internal competition and contestability and the values of public service, of co-operation and collaboration.
"We have set out our stall with absolute clarity. NHS Scotland is, and always will be, a service that is owned by the people of this country."
http://www.redorbit.com/news/health/146 ... e=r_health
BMA chairman Dr Hamish Meldrum praised the Scottish health service in his opening speech at the BMA's annual representative meeting.
He said: "Colleagues, look around you at the sort of health system Scotland has to offer. The BMA wants to see an NHS untarnished by a market economy, true to its beginnings, giving the public a fair, caring, equitable and costeffective health service. Not a service run like a shoddy supermarket war. If it can be done here in Edinburgh, it can be done in England."