We need NHS that treats emergencies and saves lives -not one that offers plastic surgery or transitioning ops
PATIENTS are dying in corridors because they can’t get into A&E.
Ambulances are taking hours and hours to arrive.
And people find it impossible to get an appointment with their local GP.
All across the country you hear the same thing. On the TV news, in the papers: “The NHS is in crisis!”
Well, yep, sure. No doubting that.
But then it always is, isn’t it? I cannot remember a time in my life when the NHS WASN’T in crisis.
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But to listen to the BBC and the Opposition politicians and some of the health professionals, you’d think the answer was simple: Spend some more money on it!
The evil Tories have starved the NHS of cash!
If we spent more, everything would be OK!
This couldn’t be further from the truth.
We are spending more money on our NHS now than at any time in history.
The Scots spend more per head on their health system than we do.
And yet it is even worse than ours.
We spend more per head of population than the likes of Italy and Spain.
And more than the average for European Union countries.
Addled old drunk
And yet the situation people find themselves in, when they rock up at A&E with flu dribbling out of their ears, is something that you might find in developing countries.
Quite clearly, the system is broken.
There are too many bureaucrats and middle managers and nowhere near enough doctors.
Too much taxpayers’ money is wasted on fatuous jobs in “diversity” and “lived experience”.
Too often, the right hand doesn’t know what the left is doing.
Communication between trusts and departments is appalling.
It can take an age to sort out even the simplest of things.
The problem is, the NHS is no longer expected simply to do the job it was set up to do, after the Second World War.
We demand much more from it these days and, because we’re living longer, there is greater pressure on the NHS from all those elderly people with chronic illnesses.
If we’re going to have an NHS at all — a health service free at the point of entry for everyone — we are going to have to lower our expectations a bit.
What we want is an NHS which provides acute, lifesaving treatment.
Not fertility treatment, not plastic surgery, not transitioning surgery.
It should be for emergencies and life-threatening illnesses, such as heart disease, strokes and cancer.
For things that pose an immediate risk to health.
But we also need to encourage — if not insist upon — medical insurance for all the other health problems which are not life-threatening.
This includes a lot of what we call geriatric care.
It would remove an enormous burden from the NHS and enable doctors and nurses to concentrate on saving lives.
But say this, and Lefties will scream: “You’re creating a two-tier system!”
Well, sure, but what’s wrong with that? There’s no problem with private involvement in the best health systems in Europe — in Switzerland, France and Germany.
It would take a brave politician to suggest such a change — and I don’t see many of those around at the moment.
But if we don’t change things, the NHS will simply stagger along like an addled old drunk, from crisis to worse crisis, and more of us will die as a result.
MY New Year resolutions this year were to be a little less understanding and tolerant about other people, especially the young, and to spend more money directly on myself.
I am a weak-willed individual and find sticking to resolutions very difficult.
So please wish me luck in these difficult tasks.
Great Gall of China
WHY has it taken our Government so long to impose travel restrictions on people coming here from Covid-hit China?
We’re making the same mistake we made in 2020 – being too slow to react.
I notice China is complaining that travel restrictions are unfair.
What’s really unfair is lying through your teeth about the spread of the epidemic in your own country.
And blocking Western attempts to find out what’s really going on.
China can’t be trusted.
Oh puddings!
WE didn’t eat our Christmas pudding this year.
We didn’t eat it the year before, either.
Or the year before that.
But we dutifully buy the bloody thing every December.
We've got about 20 stored in the cupboard under the stairs.
But then who can eat a Christmas pudding when you’ve just stuffed yourself with turkey?
It’s one of those things you buy because you think you’re meant to.
Awful news
Paid to have my DNA checked out.
In case I was heir to the throne or something.
Turns out I am almost entirely . . . SCOTTISH.
I was, like, “WTF? How did that happen? I’m not ginger. I don’t eat pies. How the hell?”
For decades I’ve been cheering whoever plays Scotland at football.
Even if it’s Russia or China.
What am I going to do noo? Oh God, you see, it’s creeping up on me.
It’ll be “och” next and calling people “Jimmy”.
Having a panic attack when I see a salad.
And drinking Irn Bru.
Here comes Transanta Claus
MY 17-year-old daughter has found a website called Transanta.
It provides Christmas gifts for transgender young people.
Or for young people who might want to be transgender.
My daughter does not fit into either category.
But it didn’t stop her writing: “I am a gender-fluid transgender teen who has fascist parents.
Please send me a PS5, a Terry’s Chocolate Orange and a large bottle of vodka. Thank you.”
If it works, I might give it a go next year.
Ron 'n' only clown
THE modest and likeable Portuguese footballer Cristiano Ronaldo has arrived in Saudi Arabia.
Or “South Africa”, as he called it at the press conference.
He’s just signed a contract worth £177million a year to play in the desert for the lovely, modern, democratic Saudis.
He said: “I beat all the records there [in Europe] and I want to beat the records here,” before adding: “This contract is unique because I’m a unique player as well so, for me, it’s normal.”
No mention that he was uniquely s**te in the World Cup.
Nor any comment about his disastrous return to at Manchester United.
Ah well.
Enjoy the camel-racing, Cristiano.
And stay classy.
HERE’S the Big Idea to get the UK moving again. Make everybody learn maths until they’re 18.
This is PM Rishi Sunak’s bold new plan.
So kids will be able to explain to you how to calculate the area of a triangle, while they put your Big Mac in a bag.
And you can tell them: “I want the number of my fries to be a prime number in the Fibonacci sequence that is above 20 and below 100.”
And they will count out exactly 89 fries.
And one for Rishi: How to calculate the number of Conservative MPs after the next election?
It’ll be the square root of naff all.
I'd sack em all
THE New Year arrives.
Turn on the TV on the morning of 1/1/23 and who’s on it?
That slab of meat with mittens Mick Lynch.
One year gone, another started.
But Thick Mick, boss of the rail workers’ RMT union, is still doing his stuff.
Causing misery for people up and down the country.
I was quite pro the rail workers back in the autumn.
Now? Stuff ’em.
Give them nothing.
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And if they strike again, sack them.
They have caused too much damage for us to give a damn about them.