MarkDennehy
Established Member
They can't be setting that much aside every year though, that's got to be the overall fund. Otherwise they'd be sitting on trillions of pounds in "rainy day" money...
RogerS":2g4krc5k said:Sorry Brian but you are looking at the wrong figures. I did not say 'expenditure' and neither did the article I linked to.
The fact is that they have set aside £26 billion for claims and potential claims. Here it is in their financial figures.
"blind defenders of the NHS" is an insult is it not? It implies we are stupid.So what's you solution then? Sell it to Branson? Or Tesco?Inoffthered":131w374t said:Comparison of the spend per head is meaningless in isolation. When you compare outcomes and see how countries that spend less per head than the UK have better survival rates for strokes, cancers and heart attacks you realise that the NHS model may not be fit for the 21st century and the blind defenders of the NHS that refuse to acknowledge its shortcomings and just demand more money are the health service equivalent of Luddites.
NB defenders of the NHS are not blind, or stupid.
Oh dear Jacob I suggest that you re-read my comment. No where did I say that the defenders of the NHS were stupid but that is your tactic when you have no cogent argument, ascribe insults that were never made. It really is rather juvenile you know.
Jacob":gdzx8x62 said:"blind defenders of the NHS" is an insult is it not? It implies we are stupid.
We are neither.
Yes there are shortcomings (with all and every organisation) but we don't believe the system is fundamentally flawed in the way you describe.
We do think that there is a lot of pressure to believe it is broken (just look at some of the posts above) to ease the process of running it down and privatising it.
Not sure what point you're trying to make Roger? The article you linked to showed a large set aside for 'current and future claims' and showed £1.6 bn paid in the last year. This isn't 25% of the budget is it?RogerS":15a2nr30 said:Sorry Brian but you are looking at the wrong figures. I did not say 'expenditure' and neither did the article I linked to.
The fact is that they have set aside £26 billion for claims and potential claims. Here it is in their financial figures.
When I originally posted I should, of course, have added "....and ambulance-chasing parasitical lawyers."
Jacob":2ejs2d1o said:"blind defenders of the NHS" is an insult is it not?
Plenty of info out there not hard to find:phil.p":bixhgxsp said:Yup. Get him up on a hate crime.
I do think that all the people who think civilisation will end if any of the NHS is privatised should stop to find out how much of it already is.
stuartpaul":3midxpsd said:Not sure what point you're trying to make Roger? The article you linked to showed a large set aside for 'current and future claims' and showed £1.6 bn paid in the last year. This isn't 25% of the budget is it?RogerS":3midxpsd said:Sorry Brian but you are looking at the wrong figures. I did not say 'expenditure' and neither did the article I linked to.
The fact is that they have set aside £26 billion for claims and potential claims. Here it is in their financial figures.
When I originally posted I should, of course, have added "....and ambulance-chasing parasitical lawyers."
I seem to remember from my time in local government that the set aside process could lead to to high headline figures but these were in effect pro rata year on year so not one massive hit on an annual budget. Clearly £26bn would be unsustainable.
Incidentally, - you missed the 'scum sucking, bottom feeders' bit off your ambulance chasing quote!
My car insurance money could be paying for petrol too, but that's not a wise way to do things because it allows for no mistakes or accidents whatsoever.RogerS":k84hyb6y said:I think the point is that this is money sitting in the bank when it could be used for front-line health care.
MarkDennehy":32zqc8da said:My car insurance money could be paying for petrol too, but that's not a wise way to do things because it allows for no mistakes or accidents whatsoever.RogerS":32zqc8da said:I think the point is that this is money sitting in the bank when it could be used for front-line health care.
Well, yes, but it's illegal just in case some people decided they'd be unwise "because they're really, really, really like, GREAT drivers, like, the best".RogerS":2xngnio1 said:And is also illegal to boot !MarkDennehy":2xngnio1 said:My car insurance money could be paying for petrol too, but that's not a wise way to do things because it allows for no mistakes or accidents whatsoever.RogerS":2xngnio1 said:I think the point is that this is money sitting in the bank when it could be used for front-line health care.
But it isn't 'sitting in the bank'. The £28.6bn reported in the NHS LA annual report and accounts for 2014/15 (http://www.nhsla.com/aboutus/Documents/ ... 014-15.pdf) is their net liabilities not what they have in the bank. An important difference.RogerS":vbtcjjqo said:stuartpaul":vbtcjjqo said:Not sure what point you're trying to make Roger? The article you linked to showed a large set aside for 'current and future claims' and showed £1.6 bn paid in the last year. This isn't 25% of the budget is it?RogerS":vbtcjjqo said:Sorry Brian but you are looking at the wrong figures. I did not say 'expenditure' and neither did the article I linked to.
The fact is that they have set aside £26 billion for claims and potential claims. Here it is in their financial figures.
When I originally posted I should, of course, have added "....and ambulance-chasing parasitical lawyers."
I seem to remember from my time in local government that the set aside process could lead to to high headline figures but these were in effect pro rata year on year so not one massive hit on an annual budget. Clearly £26bn would be unsustainable.
Incidentally, - you missed the 'scum sucking, bottom feeders' bit off your ambulance chasing quote!
I think the point is that this is money sitting in the bank when it could be used for front-line health care.
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