Spunt's helpful guide to Britain for fat Americans - Learn about Anglos so you can hate them better

What should I cover next?

  • The BBC

    Votes: 40 51.3%
  • Sportsball

    Votes: 10 12.8%
  • Education

    Votes: 23 29.5%
  • Culture

    Votes: 19 24.4%
  • Something else?

    Votes: 3 3.8%
  • Kys Anglo faggot retard nigger

    Votes: 13 16.7%

  • Total voters
    78
  • Poll closed .
and their incomprehensible, dying language with way too many consonants,
This is incorrect. Welsh has has a perfectly normal number of consonants. What throws people off is that Welsh has several vowels that look like consonants to the untrained eye (w and y)

So, for instance, an Englishman might look at the Welsh word for hospital:
ysbyty​
and think it's just a string of consonants. But actually, that word has got vowels, three of them in fact, and might alternately be rendered something like "uhsbuttee".
 
I sometimes see some Bri'ish lefty types, especially comic book writers like Warren Ellis and Grant Moore, act like Thatcherite Britain was some sort of uniquely traumatic event in world history, and I have a hard time getting why (aside from them being whiny lefty babies). The forward to V for Vendetta talks about how the inspiration for it came from news about how the real-world British government under Thatcher was going to round up all the gays and put them in camps, which isn't something I can find any actual historical evidence for. There's a bit in Ellis' Planetary where a bunch of comic book figures get together, decades later, to grieve over how unimaginably awful Britain was in the 80s, and anyone who wasn't there just can't know what it was like. It's like people wanted the Winter of Discontent to continue in perpetuity. What's up with that? Is it an ongoing Thing among the nomenklatura, or just a particular fixation for a few?
I could write a massive spergout about this but to put it in terms that Americans will immediately grasp:

Iron Lady Bad.
 
Ben Elton is still banging on about Thatcher. Dude, come on, it's been 30 years - give it a fucking rest already!
Ben Elton hasn't done anything funny since Blackadder when him and Richard Curtis were balancing each other out. His recent sitcoms like The Wright Way have been shocking.

Also, to quote Mark Steel: "He's always saying: 'Let me tell you what we say about Mrs Thatcher down our way' and you think: 'Well she probably lives down your way'".
 
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Can anybody explain why English soccer fans are so terrible? No other sport inflicts such wanton destruction for the Anglo.
Alcohol. Because you cant drink in the stands during a game, people get loaded up before a game.
Add that to emotions running high in big games like derbies and how a crowd can easily recruit numbers, and things can get out of hand. Firms don't even really exist in england anymore, Its only so predominantly in the news because there's an agenda against english footy fans. You dont see anything about Lazio ultras waving swastikas, for instance
 
I could write a massive spergout about this but to put it in terms that Americans will immediately grasp:

Iron Lady Bad.
I thought exactly this and I'm probably going to force any writers I see make a shitty trump analogy or bitching about him 5 years down the line to endure several fucking swirlies for still being assmad about it. Or take remedial writing courses since there's nothing more insulting to pretentious writers than being forced to listen to something you already know (or think you know).

I'm only disappointed that exactly what I think will happen (30 more years of trump asshurt when real fucking problems are happening) will come true since it has happened before. :spudking:reeeeeee my side of the aisle being retarded reeeeeee
 
I could write a massive spergout about this but to put it in terms that Americans will immediately grasp:

Iron Lady Bad.
I once asked an American who hated Maggie why he hated Maggie, and he answered "because she closed the coal mines".

Bear in mind that this was a man who never spoke up about West Virginia or sperged about the green progressives' campaigns to undermine coal. He had never set foot in Wales or Northern England, and had no personal stake in the lives of the angry, sexist, racist white people living in those regions. Yet he was passionately mad at Margaret Thatcher for taking failed, dirty, racist-filled coal mines, coal mines that were owned not by private corporations but by the government - owned, in effect, by her, a strong and independent female leader whose election broke centuries of patriarchal rule - and simply doing what the American left has been trying to do for decades.

Iron Lady Bad is probably the most succinct explanation for people's attitudes towards Thatcher that I've ever heard. So thanks for that, and expect a visit from Minilove within the fortnight.

You are the dead.
 
3. Healthcare

The Bri'ish are very good at inventing things. Specifically, they invent something, get it horribly wrong because they have no idea what they are doing, then other countries fix it and do it better. The British then insist that their way was better and continue doing the thing they were always doing it, and Britain becomes a shithole as a consequence because learning best practice from *spit* foreigners is tantamount to inviting Hitler to be the Queen or something (despite the fact that the Royal Family are already as German as a sausage made out of Panzers and football trophies, but shhh).

We invented trains. We then built our bridges too low, our tunnels too small and our tracks with curves that were far too sharp, making our railways the worst in the Western world and not economically feasible to fix. We invented countless sports (more on those in another post) and then the rest of the world started thrashing us at all of them. We invented America only to have America kick our asses. We invented capitalism and ended up having our economy bailed out by the IMF in 1976 (adjusting for inflation, it remains the biggest loan the IMF ever sent anyone and we were still paying it off until 2010).

And we invented socialised healthcare.

Is the British healthcare system better than the American one?

Yes. Is it very nearly the worst healthcare system in the Western world? Also yes.

This isn't because the NHS is good. It's because the American system is shit. Forget how it's funded for now. The US has the worst healthcare statistics anywhere in the West, however you measure it. Americans pay more (as a percentage of GDP) than anywhere else in the West for worse healthcare than anywhere else in the West. The worst doctor-patient ratio, the worst dignosis rates, the highest negligence and malpractice rates, the lowest recovery rates for almost every fatal disease, and the worst rates for preventing avoidable diseases.

Look at it this way. The operation I am currently recovering from was done entirely privately and funded (apart from $200 for the initial meeting with the surgeon) entirely by private insurance that costs me a whopping $15 a month. The amount the entire operation cost me and my insurers put together was less than HALF what it would have cost in the USA, and I would be statistically more likely to develop a complication or even die in the USA as well.

If I had (as an increasing number of desperate Brits are starting to do, including some of my friends) gone abroad to Romania or Turkey to have it, it would have cost half as much AGAIN and not been any riskier (seriously, if you're a Brit and you're stuck on an interminable NHS surgery waiting list or you don't trust sleepy NHS doctors to not remove the wrong organ, look into Romania - cheap, quality surgery in luxury surroundings is becoming a serious industry there and you will be treated like royalty rather than resource-sapping scum like you would in the filthy Soviet misery cubes they call NHS hospitals).

Most Brits don't understand the US healthcare system in the slightest. Whilst it is pretty bad, it's not as bad as your average Brit thinks it is. As far as we are concerned, if you show up bleeding on the doorstep of an American hospital, they will administer a paper bag test and rummage through your wallet for your credit cards. Fail either of those tests, and they chuck you back into the street to bleed out, then sue you for getting their steps dirty. Brits have no idea what Medicare or Medicaid are or what they do, and they think that Obamacare was an American NHS that would have solved every problem and that Bad Orange Man sabotaged it because he masturbates to dying children then smears their liver bile over his face for that fresh orange glow.

Why is this? It's because of the Labour Party and their allies in the BBC. Allow me to explain.

There are very few things that the Labour party have done that are still popular. They nationalised a vast number of industries (everything from holiday tour operators to road haulage, the railways, airlines and carmakers), and ran them all into the ground while the rest of the world surged past us. Until 1987, if you wanted a telephone, you had to apply to the Post Office for one and it would take months to be installed, if the installers weren't on strike which they usually were, and your phone would be shit. Labour enthusiastially promoted the uncontrolled trade union militancy of the 1970s (which reduced the UK to an official 3-day working week to save electricity at one point, so many coal miners and power workers were on strike) then openly opposed Thatcher's campaign of taming them in the 1980s. They opposed the Falklands war, and said we should just hand over our territory to any two-bit junta that invades it because something something Imperialism (even though the Falklands have been British since before Argentina even existed and if anyone was being Imperialist it was the Argies). Thatcher won that war in large part just to spite the Labour party and it made her massively popular (oh yeah, and the Americans didn't lift a finger to help - "An Attack on One is an Attack on All" my hairy 3-buttocked arse, and we'll remember that if the Chinese invade Guam or something).

The Labour party adopted an openly pro-Soviet attitude during the height of the Cold War. It later emerged from the Mitrokhin archives that Labour had been infiltrated by the Stasi and the KGB, and that Brezhnev saw Labour governments as a way to keep Britain weak and did whatever he could to get them into power - Thatcher on the other hand made the Soviets shit themselves in fear.

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(John Major not so much)

Then Blair brought you the chaos of Devolution and our reviled participation in the invasions of Iraq and Afghanistan. Now of course the wokescolds have invaded Labour and call working-class Northerners racist for objecting when Pakistani rape gangs kidnap their daughters and use them as living sex toys. The same Pakistani immigrants welcomed into this country by, of course, the Labour party. Basically, everything of significance the Labour Party ever did is now hated by everyone.

Except the NHS.

Basically the NHS is now the only significant thing the British Left has done that people still like. And they only still like it due to a 75-year propaganda campaign that has even been adopted by the Conservatives because they are so frightened of being seen to be against it. The standard employment contract for most NHS workers makes criticising the NHS on social media a disciplinary offence. The American system (which remember the British think is even more barbaric than it actually is) is used as a boogeyman and presented as the only possible alternative whenever anyone dares to raise the possibility of even the slightest reform. There is a complete media blackout on systems such as those in Portugal, Australia, Japan, Singapore or Germany where a hybrid private/socialised system delivers better medical outcomes, lower costs for patients and infinitely less bureaucratic bullshit. But that would involve politicians from every party and the entirety of the media admitting they were wrong for the last 75 years so good fucking luck with that. And of course if people start to question whether a compulsory state-funded health service is a good idea, people start to ask awkward questions about the BBC's generous funding arrangements, so good luck getting the BBC to cover any of this properly. These threats were used by Labour for decades to make sure NHS staff dutifully voted Labour, something that became known as a part of Labour's "Client State" strategy - expand the public sector, then threaten people into voting for you by saying that the other lot will delete your job (the SNP have adopted this strategy very effectively in Scotland as well). As the largest single employer in all of Europe save the Russian military, with 1.6 million staff, this bought Labour a LOT of votes over the years.

Why the NHS is shit

Accident and Emergency (ER for 'muricans) is exciting and glamorous, and therefore is the only aspect of the NHS the media ever talk about. As budgets have become stretched, any attempt to cut back on A&E is met with screams of bloody murder from the media and interest groups. So the cuts go to less glamorous places instead. George Clooney never starred in an Emmy-winning drama about a diabetes clinic or a pain management clinic, so these services were quietly closed without a squeak from the usual suspects. But, denied the chance to manage their conditions, these patients would end up in A&E instead. It has got so bad that people are often told by their GPs to wait until their condition is bad enough to end up in hospital before seeing them again because there is no treatment or preventative medicine for them unless it's a total crisis. Of course it costs orders of magnitude more to treat these patients in A&E than in a local clinic, and in the meantime they get so sick they have to go on disability, impoverishing them and preventing them from paying any the taxes that fund the NHS. This media-driven, ass-backwards way of prioritising is fundamental to the way the NHS is run.

WARNING: You are entering a Joke Desert. Severe shortages of funny for several paragraphs. Stock up on chuckles before proceeding, you will fucking need them.

As a result, the NHS is only any good at treating acute (short-term) conditions. If you turn up with something that's bleeding or infected, you're probably going to get the treatment you need. But develop a chronic (long-term) problem, and you're probably fucked, because the NHS hasn't got a fucking clue what to do with you. The condition I'm being treated for privately right now is not rare, but in three years of trying to get the NHS to investigate my problems I got absolutely nowhere, got accused of making my symptoms up, and had a referral to the needed specialism over-ruled twice by my GP's boss without explanation, during which I became too sick to work full-time. Whilst my operation was funded by my insurance, much of my diagnostic work wasn't and I've had to pay thousands out of my own pocket to get to this stage. When I finally sat in front of the correct specialist consultant (a private doctor who had quit the NHS because they "wouldn't let him treat patients anymore"), he took one look at me and said "Jesus Christ, why didn't they send you to me years ago?" But we both knew the answer to that.

A friend of a friend was suffering from health problems that NHS doctors either failed to diagnose, or told him to his face that he was making up. He then went to medical school, qualified as a doctor, got a specialism, then gained the right to do private diagnostic tests on himself before diagnosing himself with his own condition. This entire process took a decade, and by the end of it the NHS had STILL not got past telling him that he had psychiatric problems rather than the serious bone disease he really had.

If you have a condition that the NHS cannot diagnose, particularly (but by no means exclusively) if you are female, the NHS will instead try to make you out to be a munchie, a pill-seeker or a malingerer. My best friend's cousin was suffering from explosive headaches and bizarre neurological symptoms including seizures, but because she tested negative for epilepsy, a diagnosis of Munchausen's Syndrome was placed on her record without her knowledge (and by a doctor who was not the qualified psychiatrist required to make such a diagnosis), and for years, every time she went to a GP she was either ignored or, on one memorable occasion, accused to her face of trying to get painkillers prescribed in order to sell them on to the local junkies. She scraped together every penny she had to get a private MRI scan, and lo and behold, twelve years after she first went to her GP about her headaches, it emerged she had a skull lining malformation that caused a bone spur to dig into her brain, and underwent emergency neurosurgery.

When she tried to get post-surgical painkillers, she was refused because Munchausen's Syndrome was STILL on her record and she had to make her own painkilers from imported Irish cough syrup and dark web tutorials. In a first world country.

The very worst area of the NHS is maternity and midwifery. The degree of neglect and negligence is astonishing. Another friend of mine had a particularly traumatic birth of her first child, and a few hours after the birth her stitches burst and blood started to gush out of her groin. She tried to summon doctors and nurses but was ignored. Her frantic husband went to the nursing station and refused to leave until he was seen, and instead of seeing what the problem was they threatened to have him arrested. By the time anyone checked on his wife, she had lost so much blood she was given a 50/50 chance of survival, fortunately fate was on her side that day.

Oh, and they wouldn't tell her what gender the baby was because the local Somalis were using that information to get backstreet abortions of little girls. In areas with large Muslim populations, it is now NHS policy to withold the sex of your own baby from you. But immigrants are the lifeblood of the country dontcha' know.

Another woman I once worked with told me how her daughter was born with her umbilical cord wrapped around her neck. It took so long for the NHS midwife to notice the problem and fix it that her now adult daughter suffered irreversibly brain damage and is now a drooling vegetable requiring 24 hour care and will never life anything like a proper life.

She was awarded £7000 ($9000) in compensation.

If you go into the Beauty Parlour, you will find VAST number of British "Munchies" and "Spoonies". Bearing the above in mind, how many of them do you think may actually genuinely have something wrong with them? Understand before you criticise. I genuinely believe for some of them that their weird behaviour is caused by a combination of undiagnosed and untreated neurological symptoms and the sanity-destroying effect of being told you are crazy every day when you are in genuine agony.

Oh yeah, let's talk about painkillers, and the body with the most Orwellian acronym in the country - the National Institute for Clinical Excellence - NICE. Nice is a "Quango", a peculiarly British kind of body that combines gigantic power with very little accountability. It is a set of bureaucrats appointed by politicians who have almost total power over some aspect of British life - equivalent perhaps to Federal Agencies in the US but much more secretive and unaccountable. NICE decides what NHS doctors are and aren't allowed to do, and in particular they determine what drugs or other treaments are allowed to be prescribed for which conditions.

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(I think this is their HQ)

NICE have reduced medicine to a series of flowcharts for diagnosis and treatment that NHS doctors have to follow or lose their careers, or even face criminal charges. If your symptoms don't quite match what's on the flowchart, you're not diagnosed. This is what happened to me - despite the latest medical literature clearly saying that my symptoms were not only not unheard of but also very common amongst people with my condition, it wasn't on the flowchart so no dice. The latest research enters a queue for NICE to pontificate over, which can take a decade and even then they'll probably fuck up. If they have an interest in medical research, as many do, your GP probably knows exactly what's wrong with you and what should be done about it, but is prevented by law from telling you or helping you. Britain's best doctors are quitting in droves in order to be able to actually treat patients, either in private practice or by going abroad.

In response to the media shrieking about the "Opioid Crisis" (which is only really a thing in the US), NICE decided last year that nobody without a formal diagnosis would get any painkillers any more. What with it often taking a decade or more (or often never, people go to their graves never knowing why they are sick and being told they are crazy until their condition kills them) for people with even relatively straightforward problems, this leaves hundreds of thousands of people with no legal way to deal with their pain and keep working. Worse, earlier this year, tens of thousands of chronically ill patients who DID have diagnoses had their painkiller prescriptions altered to between two thirds and half of what they were before. They were not told, nor did their GPs, for the most part, follow the required procedure for altering a patient's regular prescriptions, making it illegal. People only found out when they went to the pharmacy and only got a fraction of the pills they got the month before. You will find no mention of either scandal anywhere in the media because muh "envy of the world" and muh "opioid crisis".

It's not even a cost-saving exercise. Opioids are cheap as shit. Just the other day the BBC was crowing about how NICE had approved the use of a drug for a terminally-ill baby that cost £1.78m ($2.45m) a year. For a baby that was going to die. Yet that much money could pay for opioid painkillers for everyone who needs them, allowing them to work and pay way, way more than £1.78m in tax every year. Another example about how the NHS is ass-backwards and driven by media and politics, rather than by medicine or even money.

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"Yay, hundreds will die to give my tard baby another 3 months"

My old weed dealer from my London days told me that that, unlike a decade ago, more than half his clients are not the stereotypical thrill-seeking teenagers and wasted slackers, but working, professional people seeking a painkiller that will allow them to keep working, because good fucking luck getting disability if your medical records say you're a pill-seeker with nothing wrong with you, even if you are wracked by agony. Other dealers have quit selling weed and smack altogether to get into the UK's massive grey/black market for medicines. The government and Police keep smacking down online pill mills offering painkillers and sleeping tablets, but they spring up again, hydra-like, because there is overwhelming demand for their services - not from junkies, but from regular people in agony who don't fit into NICE's stupid fucking flowcharts.

If you are British, and you are unwell but undiagnosed, my advice is to learn about wild plants and how to get medicine out of them. Large numbers of people are now doing this, in much secrecy, amongst a media blackout and having to evade the Police while they do so. This is the state we are in now, we're building 200mph railway lines next to fields where our citizens are foraging for medicinal plants because the government won't allow doctors to treat them. There's no funny joke here. This is just Britain in 2021.

The way the NHS treats its patients is a walk in the park compared to how it treats its staff.

As a result of every single medical condition being funnelled into emergency medicine, hospital doctors are literally worked to death. If you are in A&E there's a very good chance that the doctor who sees you is a trainee who hasn't slept in four days and hasn't seen his supervisor in even longer. Legislation was recently passed to prevent hospital doctors working more than 100(!) hours a week. However, many such junior and trainee hospital doctors were promptly told by their managers (who work 36 hours a week for two or three times their salary) that if they didn't work 120 hours a week they wouldn't complete their placements and their careers would be over.

For the hard of math, there are only 168 hours in a week, and this 120 hours requirement doesn't include mealtimes, breaks or commuting. It's not clear whether this kills more doctors or more patients.

A nurse was forced to lift a 400 pound patient on her own into emergency surgery because he was flatlining and there were no hospital porters available. She fractured her spine in the process, was paralysed from the waist down and was bedbound for six months. When, still in a wheelchair, she attended her "return to work" meeting, she was confronted by seven NHS managers and HR drones. These people had prepared a presentation for her, estimating the number of patients they thought had died due to her six month "unauthorised" absence from work, and sacked her on the spot. Each and every one of those people earned at least three or four times what the missing hospital porters would have been paid to be on duty the night her employers put her in a wheelchair for life.

If a doctor has the temerity to quit all this madness and go into private practice, the NHS persecutes them and tries anything it can to strip them of their loicences to practice, in the guise of the General Medical Council. One doctor was hauled up in front of the GMC for "practicing midwifery" without the correct loicence by assisting in a birth at her neighbour's property - even though the patient in question was a Devonshire Saddleback Pig.

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(It probably voted Tory too, the LITERAL SWINE)

Of course, when an NHS doctor fucks up and kills someone, it's swept under the carpet.

I could tell you more. I could tell you about Stafford Hospital, where it was estimated that between 500 and 2000 people died from medical negligence in just three years from 2005-2008 (from a hospital serving a town of just 68,000 people) and it barely made the papers. If that many people had died on the entire country's railways in that time there would have been literal rioting in the streets (well, more rioting than usual), but because it was the NHS and because there was no smoking wreckage, nobody cared. A handful of people whose loved ones died finally got compensation of about $13,000 each after a decade-long battle. I could talk about how the NHS harboured the world's most prolific serial killer in Harold Shipman, protecting him while he killed anything up to 500 of his patients. I could talk about how David Cameron even used his own dead son to deflect accusations that he might reform the NHS. But I'm too depressed to continue even for a Brit.

Apologies for the relative lack of jokes in this one. It's very hard to make this situation funny, even when your sense of humour is so dark the Police kneel on its neck.

I can't breathe, indeed.
 
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As a classical liberal-inclined Amerifat, I've always had a hard time balancing the abundance of stories like the above with the Stockholm-ish fascination on both sides of the aisle with the NHS. (Same with the Canadians and their health system.) So you pay taxes out the ass for this health system, and then in the very good chance that you end up with some issue that will take years and years to get treatment from the NHS (if you get it at all), you end up paying for actual service from a private and possibly overseas doctor anyway? And yet if any politician tries to suggest this system isn't that great and there might be room for improvement or it might be better for everyone to get rid of it altogether or generally does anything other than verbally taking NHS's twelve-incher all the way down to their gullet, they get dragged through the streets and flailed. Madness. (EDIT: After a bit more reflection, I suppose there are parallels with America's public education system… People who take their kids to private schools or home school in order to get them a better education still have to pay the taxes to keep the public schools open and their teachers' unions appeased.)

Is the American system inefficient? Well, compared to what? It's anecdata but I've never had one of these stories of things going undiagnosed for years happen to myself, my friends, or my family - unless a publicly-funded Veterans' Administration hospital was involved… If I need treatment, I make an appointment and get it done, and then I pay the bill afterwards. It's like getting a haircut or going out to a restaurant. What's the problem with having that kind of system if people can afford it? (Yes, if people can't afford it, complications arise, but I don't think the answer should be removing choices from those that can.)

I think part of the problem with the American system, if there is one, is that healthcare providers tend to bill insurance companies at wildly-inflated rates compared to what they bill individuals. I'm not sure if this is illegal or not, but it's an open secret. As an underinsured freelancer, I see this every time I go to the dentist for a routine cleaning. "Okay, we'll send the bill for $30,000 to your insurance company… Oh, you don't have insurance? Okay, that'll be $12. Cash or credit?" (Slight exaggeration on those numbers.) Of course the insurance companies have to pass those inflated costs on to their clients. We probably should have laws in place that didn't let them do that (or enforce ones that might already be there) and that might help keep insurance costs in check. But IANA expert when it comes to the intricacies of this sort of thing.
 
As a result, the NHS is only any good at treating acute (short-term) conditions. If you turn up with something that's bleeding or infected, you're probably going to get the treatment you need. But develop a chronic (long-term) problem, and you're probably fucked, because the NHS hasn't got a fucking clue what to do with you.
This is it in a nutshell. My Dad had a heart attack a couple of years ago (the crazy motherfucker drove himself to the hospital while he was having the heart attack because he couldn't be bothered to call an ambulance or get me to drive him and he still managed to park his car perfectly in the car park) and he got the blockage flushed out within an hour of walking into the hospital (although to be fair, middle aged bloke with chest pains sets off every alarm in the building), didn't even need surgery. They discharged him less than 48 hours later.

Conversely, my friend's brother in law was experiencing serious abdominal pains, bloody stools and see-sawing between diarrhoea and constipation for months, but was told he was just constipated. He had to fight tooth and nail to get properly diagnosed, and when he did it was colon cancer. They barely caught it before it went to stage 4 and they wouldn't have caught it at all if he hadn't kept hammering on their door.

Also, my Grandad (RIP) was admitted to hospital for what was meant to be a short stay when his dementia worsened. They weren't properly equipped to care for him long term, but they would not let him out unless we jumped through endless hoops to prove we'd be able to care for him and even though we were perfectly capable of doing so, nothing seemed to satisfy them. We effectively had to smuggle him out in the end and if we hadn't he'd probably have died a lot sooner than he did.

If you ever get the chance, read This Is Going to Hurt: Secret Diaries of a Junior Doctor by Adam Kay. It's very funny, but also eye-opening on all the shit junior Doctors have to deal with.
 
If you ever get the chance, read This Is Going to Hurt: Secret Diaries of a Junior Doctor by Adam Kay. It's very funny, but also eye-opening on all the shit junior Doctors have to deal with.
It's on my bookshelf, definite recommend. He's also a very funny guy, he literally quit the NHS to become a comedian, I guess because crying and laughing are similar on a biological level.
 
when an NHS doctor fucks up and kills someone
When the nurses fuck up and kill someone it's even worse, at least the Doctors name is on the charts try filing a claim against the 5-10 nurses who ignored a patient so bad they develop bedsores and severe contact dermatitis from their own piss. It happens far more often than people realise but mostly to people that have no friends or family that come visit so you rarely hear a peep about it. I expect it bumped up Covid death substantially since all visitors were banned.

£1.7m for that kids drugs is an actual drop in the bucket compared to the prices they pay for all the bullshit irrelevant to patient care. The NHS like all government schemes is a money pit, It's in their best interest to spend more money than they have on shit they don't need so they can say at the next funding review "we don't get enough money" it's a great tool for whatever political party is out of power.

For example I had an acquaintance who worked as a groundskeeper/gardener at a hospital he asked his manager for some wood stain for an old picnic table (according to him perfectly fine just needed sanding and staining) instead his managers boss bought new picnic tables for nearly £1500 each.
 
The US has the worst healthcare statistics anywhere in the West, however you measure it. Americans pay more (as a percentage of GDP) than anywhere else in the West for worse healthcare than anywhere else in the West. The worst doctor-patient ratio, the worst dignosis rates, the highest negligence and malpractice rates, the lowest recovery rates for almost every fatal disease, and the worst rates for preventing avoidable diseases.
Is that actually correct? My recollection of comparative healthcare statistics is that the US was at the top for measures like medical outcomes and patient satisfaction with level of care, it's just expensive and most of the metrics that went into overall numbers were "how socialized are the costs of care" which, unsurprisingly, favors socialized systems.

If you want top of the line care, especially when it comes to cancer, the US is by and large Where You Go. A hospital my mom used to work in had a floor where all the signs were also in Arabic, because that's where the House of Saud came for treatment. "I have to go to America for surgery" is a recurring plot element in Japanese fiction, because your local access to actual good care, rather than the bare minimum, is conditioned on your ability to pay under the table, or on having personal connections to the owners of the hospital.
I would be statistically more likely to develop a complication or even die in the USA as well.
Is that due to quality of care, or because the system is flooded with diabetic COPD cases who are more complication than human?
 
A nurse was forced to lift a 400 pound patient on her own into emergency surgery because he was flatlining and there were no hospital porters available. She fractured her spine in the process, was paralysed from the waist down and was bedbound for six months. When, still in a wheelchair, she attended her "return to work" meeting, she was confronted by seven NHS managers and HR drones. These people had prepared a presentation for her, estimating the number of patients they thought had died due to her six month "unauthorised" absence from work, and sacked her on the spot. Each and every one of those people earned at least three or four times what the missing hospital porters would have been paid to be on duty the night her employers put her in a wheelchair for life.
No good deed goes unpunished in the UK, it seems.

So how's the public school system turning out for you? Since it seems like being a doctor is a slow-motion suicide attempt.
 
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