Michael C. Moynihan | March 31, 2008
More horror stories from the NHS dental service, from the Times of London:
Health service dentists have been forced to go on holiday or spend time on the golf course this month despite millions of patients being denied dental care.
Many have fulfilled their annual work quotas allotted by the National Health Service and have been turning patients away because they are not paid to do extra work. This is despite the fact that more than 7m people in Britain are unable to find an NHS dentist.
Patients have been told they must either pay privately or return in April when the new work year begins. People suffering from toothache have been advised to go to hospital.
Or they could just get the pliers out.
Full story.
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I'm against national health care, but I don't think you can
induce that all such systems are as bad as the British one.
When I lived in Prague, I had no problem getting a dentist, or a
doctor.
The problem was the cost of the insurance. I was paying for
insurance roughly what I pay here in the US, but doctors were only
getting paid about $200 per month, and there was no fear of
malpractice suits.
If the same system were applied here, one can only imagine the
costs.
I've heard quite a few horror stories from people who come to
the U.S. and are shocked by the difference in quality. A lot of UK
dentists simply tell their patients to live with conditions that
would require emergency attention here.
When the government assigns you work instead you being forced to
compete for customers, the incentive to achieve high levels of
customer satisfaction is close to nil.
Hmm. So I can't blame the British teeth entirely on the poor chavs that have them. The NHS shares a large part of the blame as well. That's good to know.
Now we know why the British famous for keeping a stiff upper lip. It's because the bureaucracy forces them to.
I know nationalized health care is bad and all, but is this really the best example of why? It says in the quote that the new work year starts in April. It's March 31st, and I doubt every single dentist met their quota for the year. I'm pretty sure the people who can't get one can afford to wait, and if not, there's the hospital.
I know nationalized health care is bad and all, but is this
really the best example of why?
You mean it isn't good enough?
Zero
Try waiting even one day with a toothache sometime.
In any case, by the time it makes the Times of London, you
can bet it has gone on for several weeks.
I know nationalized health care is bad and all,
Can we do this badly in America, too?
Yes We Can!
I'm pretty sure the people who can't get one can afford to
wait, and if not, there's the hospital.
Thanks for dictating to people what they can and can't do. That is
precisely the problem with nationalized health care in the first
place: people like you thinking they know what's best for other
people.
Not that anyone cares, but the name of the Newspaper is just The Times. The London part went long ago.
Oh, sure. You can wait. Yep, if you have an abscess you can wait
while the infection finds its way into your bloodstream and maybe
even into your brain. Yes, toothaches can lead to death.
Sure, you can go to a hospital for that abscess, but they'll not
know what to do with you - and may even decline to see you, since
they're not dentists. They may, if you're lucky, give you an
antibiotic, but it's probably going to be the wrong
antibiotic.
So, while you wait for a dentist to accept you for an appointment,
you can load up on an antibiotic that will do nothing but destroy
the floral balance of your system while your risk of a brain
infection increases daily.
Yeah Zero, it's perfectly reasonable to require emergent dental
cases to wait.
I'm not making this up - this was the experience of a close family
member right here in the USofA. It's how bad it can get when you
get that abscess on a holiday weekend and have to wait for the
dentist offices to reopen. How much worse must it be to be forced -
by the government, no less - to wait even longer!
Lunchstealer:
I warned you, no, I warned you about the slogan, right. That's the
end. Stop the blog! Stop it.
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