SUBSCRIBER LOGIN






Search First Things

Advanced Search

RSS

Secondhand Smoke
Archives

Categories

Monthly


« Previous  |Home|  Next »         

Saturday, December 26, 2009, 11:48 PM
Wesley J. Smith

The NHS continues to teach us important lessons. Once government bureaucracy gets hold of health care, the sky will be the limit–for their expenses.  This is especially true when things go wrong, since the answer to problems with centralized systems is, well, more central controllers.  And that is what has happened in the NHS. From the story:

Spending on NHS bureaucracy has risen by 50 per cent in just four years, according to “heartbreaking” government figures. The increases include a 43 per cent rise in the costs of managers, while spending on clerical staff rose by 78 per cent at Primary Care Trusts (PCTs), which decide how NHS funds should be used. Meanwhile, their expenditure on management consultants and temporary staff more than doubled. Patients’ groups accused the Government of wasting “ludicrous and heartbreaking” sums expanding an army of administrators while starving the frontline of resources.

Meanwhile, many NHS hospitals are filthy, women give birth in elevators, and rationing adversely impacts the sick, the elderly, and people with disabilities.

No, this wasn’t private insurance companies, but government controlled health care.  I used to be for it, but I now realize that centralized planning just doesn’t work.

3 Comments

    Tweets that mention SHS Meltdown: Spending on Bureaucracy Up 50% in Just 4 Years! » Secondhand Smoke | A First Things Blog -- Topsy.com
    December 27th, 2009 | 12:49 am

    [...] This post was mentioned on Twitter by Vince Humphreys, Pro-Life Healthcare . Pro-Life Healthcare said: SHS Meltdown: Spending on Bureaucracy Up 50% in Just 4 Years! http://bit.ly/6PkwGZ #healthcare #prolife [...]

    HistoryWriter
    December 27th, 2009 | 9:56 am

    Same old, same old — using the UK’s National Health Service as an example of what will happen here in the USA when health care reform is finally implemented. Our system hasn’t even been implemented yet and the naysayers are jumping up and down all over it. I understand it must be pretty frustrating for conservatives to lose, but face it: you’ve lost.

    Jeffery
    December 27th, 2009 | 10:12 am

    And yet… US per capita expenditures on healthcare are 2.5 times greater than the average of other wealthy nations. Every year we unnecessarily redistribute $1 trillion from the working classes to the government – insurance industry complex. The populations that insurance companies find uneconomic to cover, the elderly, the poor, the infirm, we’ve allowed to be dropped on government, for us all to insure.

Links

Blogs

Find Us

Contact