You cant really compare like for like with EU spending on healthcare, espeically France and Germany as they have a different system. There system is funded by employee/employer % contributions with the Governments funding those with no job or income below x amount of Euros. If you employed that type of system in the UK then you could fund healthcare to the tune of around £350 Billion per year. Which with the right managment would be 100% better in terms of healthcare per head of population etc.greenmark wrote: ↑Tue Jul 09, 2024 7:49 pmThe Health Foundation saysArchery1969 wrote: ↑Tue Jul 09, 2024 5:25 pmI wouldn't call £171.8 Billion (KingsFund figures) between 2022/2023 a lack of investment ?greenmark wrote: ↑Tue Jul 09, 2024 3:44 pm
Plus, due to the lack of investment in the NHS it's unravelling and they have the whip hand. Pay up or do you want to be treated by a doctor that feels under-valued and/or doesn't have enough colleagues to do the job he/she wants to do?
I've known quite a few medics and they vary from despair to a shrug about the support they recieve to do their jobs as they would wish,
It's a vocation. I know someone that walked away from medicine to be a plant hire office manager. She's better paid, works more comfortable hours and people rarely die on her shift. Go figure.
Average day-to-day health spending in the UK between 2010 and 2019 was £3,005 per person – 18% below the EU14 average of £3,655.
If UK spending per person had matched the EU14 average, then the UK would have spent an average of £227bn a year on health between 2010 and 2019 – £40bn higher than actual average annual spending during this period (£187bn).
Matching spending per head to France or Germany would have led to an additional £40bn and £73bn (21% to 39% increase respectively) of total health spending each year in the UK.
Over the past decade, the UK had a lower level of capital investment in health care compared with the EU14 countries for which data are available. Between 2010 and 2019, average health capital investment in the UK was £5.8bn a year. If the UK had matched other EU14 countries’ average investment in health capital (as a share of GDP), the UK would have invested £33bn more between 2010 and 2019 (around 55% higher than actual investment during that period).
I acknowledge 2019 is 5 years ago. Do you reckon investment in the NHS has improved since then? Even the 2022/2023 figure is below the EU14 average for 2010-2019.
As always if anyone can point me to a resource to expand my understanding I would be genuinely grateful. This stuff is important I think.
The problem with the UK is nobody, apart from a few want to change the system, meaning the Government will always have to find an amount of money which continues to grow year by year.
The UK population and Government needs educating on healthcare as its not 1946.