The NHS

Each year the NHS budget is £69,700,000,000. That’s over £1,000 per person and over £3,000 per working person in the UK.

As a coeliac, I take probably all of that £1,000 in prescription gluten free food. A quick estimate suggests I remove from the NHS £450 per year on flour alone (approx £7 per box), but even I, an unusually heavy user for my age, do not take out my whole family’s £4,000 per year ‘contribution’. If everyone younger than me, and most people a good deal older than me are not using the £1,000 amount, I have to ask who is getting good value from the NHS? There will be the occasional person who takes out more than their £1,000 in a given year, and the still rarer person who costs the NHS more than that for longer or even the whole of their life, but the vast majority of us are not going to be using that much.

Now consider that the NHS went into the red this year, and that it isn’t the world’s best health service at any rate, and you have to ask yourself whether we need to look again at how the NHS is run. The NHS is a just and necessary thing, the US model of “can’t pay, can’t stay in hospital” is sick and inhumane – I cannot see a situation where I would call for its removal – but there must be something done about spiralling costs.

Much of the NHS spend must go on medication. Medicines have been designed by profit-making companies for a long time and, though I have no evidence, I am sure there is an incentive not to cure people, but to treat them. How much profit is there in a drug that is taken once and cures someone of AIDS for example? How much profit is there in a drug that keeps an AIDS sufferer alive for decades? This problem has resulted in few cures for well-known ailments and many more treatments that must be taken for a long time.

Profits in pharmaceutical businesses are not evil in and of themselves, but the pharmaceutical industry cannot and should not be relied upon to create the cures of tomorrow and progress medicine. Maybe the best medicine for the ailing health service is a cost reduction exercise in the NHS, coupled with reinvestment of the savings in medical research for cures?

The Spectator magazine carried an article in 2003, which attacked the attack on profits, which I agree with, but we should not expect or accept that pharmaceutical businesses have our best interests at heart.



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  1. #1 by wonkotsane on September 23rd, 2005 - 9:01 pm

    My mum had/has cancer (long story) and a few years back she was having regular injections which cost the NHS over £250 a pop.

  2. #2 by Gav on September 23rd, 2005 - 9:55 pm

    They’ve been working on a cure for coeliac disease for ages, but there’s an entire industry producing gluten free food, a lot of which is prescribable – I dread to think what the cost of coeliac disease is, and that only affects 0.33% of people.

    Sadly cancer affects far more; everyone, if they don’t die of other causes, will eventually suffer cancer and, for this reason there are charities trying to cure cancer (rather than just treat it). There is no reason as far as I am concerned that the government could not put savings it makes in the NHS towards giving funds to Cancer Research UK.

    I wish your mum well and good luck.

  3. #3 by John King on September 24th, 2005 - 12:16 pm

    The Office of fair trading is currently looking in to the cost of drugs to the NHS: http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/health/4242564.stm

    And here is a breakdown of the NHS budget: http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/health/4264404.stm

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