Tag: Britain

  • How conservative leadership put Britain’s national health service on life support

    How conservative leadership put Britain’s national health service on life support

    Britain’s universal health care system, the National Health Service Corps, was for a very long time a model for the rest of the developed world. It offered free coverage for most medically necessary health care services to everyone in the nation. Then there was Brexit, rising costs, conservative leadership that wanted to privatize the national health service, misleadingly claiming that it was unsustainable, and a government resistance to appropriate enough funds to cover costs. It was on life support.

    The New York Times tells the sad story in this opionion video, How Britain Put One of the World’s Best Health Care Systems on Life Support. It is a testament to what a government can do for its people if it chooses to see health care as a human right. It also shows what a government can do to destroy a public good through privatization. In the US, we all know that story.

    The story is not so different from what our government has been doing to weaken the Veterans’ Administration, which had provided outstanding low-cost health care coverage to veterans for decades.

    https://www.nytimes.com/video/opinion/100000009190434/nhs-britain-universal-health-care.html

    Here’s more from Just Care:

  • Can we fix our broken health care system without reining in costs?

    Can we fix our broken health care system without reining in costs?

    Aaron Carroll writes for the New York Times about how to fix our broken health care system.

    Notwithstanding all the ways the Covid-19 pandemic exposed fissures in our health care system, bringing with it more than one million deaths, Congress is doing precious little to address uninsurance and underinsurance and their consequences for our health and well-being.  Carroll studied health systems in five other wealthy countries to appreciate differences between them and the US. Carroll suggests that universal health care is the solution to our broken system, whatever it looks like; he doesn’t see health care costs in the US as a stumbling block.

    We spend more per person on health care than any other country, and health outcomes are generally significantly worse than in every other wealthy country, including life expectancy. So, what does the United Kingdom, France, Australia and New Zealand do differently? They all guarantee health care coverage to their citizens.

    Carroll posits that in every other significant way these other wealthy countries are different from one another. But, these countries not only share guaranteed universal coverage. They all have a sets price for most health care goods and services. It’s that combination, along with significant restrictions on insurance company profits, that make health care affordable for their citizens.

    Australia, New Zealand and Canada all offer government-provided coverage,  sometimes called single-payer.  Australia and New Zealand’s single-payer systems allow people to buy private insurance to improve their access to care. Canada does not allow that.  Australia’s system requires people to contribute significantly to the cost of their care.

    Carroll says France’s system is not quite single-payer because people get their coverage through different systems. But, it is primarily with government funding, either through their jobs or some other means, and with significant government rules and regulations. France requires people to pay upfront for their outpatient care and then reimburses them for the cost.

    Britain likely offers the most robust coverage of all these countries. Most services come with no out-of-pocket costs. Britain’s system is different from single payer because it is not insurance-based. Rather, the government employs physicians and owns hospitals and covers people’s care directly.  The British system is socialized medicine. While people can have private insurance for enhanced benefits, almost no one does.

    Singapore offers everyone only catastrophic coverage for high-cost services. People can buy private insurance to supplement the public coverage, but few do.

    Carroll acknowledges that public hospital systems in all these countries make a huge difference in improving access to care, eliminating competition for profits. It seems hard to imagine how the US moves to that system to reduce costs and improve access, given the very limited number of public hospitals here. Is there any way to open up the Veterans Administration hospitals to all Americans? And, even if there were, would that give people living in remote areas adequate access to care?

    Carroll points up that housing, food and education also contribute significantly to better health. Other countries invest in these “social determinants of health.” The US does not, but we could.

    Carroll suggests that if we allocated some of our health care budget to the social determinants of health, we would likely see far better health outcomes. But, we are currently on the reverse trajectory, cutting this discretionary spending, such as food stamps. With all the money we invest in health care, Carroll has hope of realigning these investments. He thinks it’s simply a matter of political will.

    Here’s more from Just Care:

  • Private equity takes advantage of older adults in long-term care homes in Britain

    Private equity takes advantage of older adults in long-term care homes in Britain

    Christine Spolar reports for Kaiser Health News on the private equity takeover of long-term care in Britain and its toll on elder care. In short, private equity is doing to British long-term care facilities exactly what has been done in the US to nursing homes: Stint on care, sell off real estate, and burden care facilities with high rent. Four Seasons Health Care, a  long-term care company in Britain, with 500 sites and 20,000 residents is now likely going into bankruptcy.

    After helping its private equity investors profit enormously through complicated financing arrangements, Four Seasons has now sold off many of its properties. Private equity is never in it for the long haul. This story is simply another version of the story we keep hearing about private equity in health care.

    Four Seasons was ultimately unable to saddle long-term care residents or the British government with high costs. Four Seasons sold off the facilities’ real estate and then put the long-term care facilities in significant debt and forced them to pay high rent and interest payments to lease their properties.

    Private equity is not generally focused on the quality of care delivered. One study found that quality suffered at these British long-term care facilities after private equity invested in them. Private equity tried to cut staff or hire less qualified staff at lower cost in order to maximize profits. Consequently, residents were left at times with inadequate care or attention to their needs. “Residents sometimes went without the appropriate care, timely medication or sufficient sanitary supplies.”

    The long-term care homes in Britain are not part of the National Health Service. They get some government support but that support has dwindled. Private equity now owns three of the five largest providers of long-term care services in Britain. And, the government does not do a good job of overseeing private equity firms.

    To complicate matters, the private equity firms’ books are designed to be difficult to understand. The local governments do not have the skills or the resources to undertake the oversight that is needed.

    The four decades beginning in 1980 saw a massive shift away from local governments in Britain operating nursing homes and long-term care facilities to for-profit and not-for-profit organizations. By 2018, local authorities provided 88 percent fewer beds, 17,100, down from 141,719.

    The British government has been unable to put decent financial reporting rules in place for companies owning long-term care facilities. Consequently, it’s hard for anyone to decipher these companies’ books and hold them accountable for bad acts. Even Conservative Party members in England have expressed concern about private equity “taking advantage of some of the most vulnerable people in our society without oversight, without controls.”

    Here’s more from Just Care: