I have had three traumatic incidents in my life:
1. I had a burst appendix that I tried to ignore because I was bloke, a rugby player and was 'dead hard'. I soon found out you can't ignore it for too long
I ended up in emergency surgery in Kings in Camberwell. It took less than an hour after being admitted to being in theatre.
2. My eldest daughter had a major accident when she decided to take a car on head first whilst on her bike. It was her fault (or rather mine as I allowed it to happen. This will haunt me til the day I die). This brought out the local North West Air Ambulance, a helicopter trip to Alder Hey in Liverpool and we made the local news as the police closed all the roads nearby for a number of hours causing major congestion everywhere. The helicopter landed at Alder Hey, we had staff waiting with trolley, the major trauma team was waiting for us as they had been alerted by the doctor in the helicopter, there were ten of them as they worked on my daughter, they then handed over to the surgical team who had been called in on a Saturday evening, The accident was at 16:10, she was in theatre at 19:10 for four hours as the absolutely brilliant surgical team saved her life and her leg.
3. My youngest was premature (1.6Kg), I delivered her eight weeks early, it was not planned in case anybody thinks I'm being macho. I called 999 at 0210 and at 02:18 I had an ambulance at the door, I opened it with my daughter in my arms in towels and the hairy, burly and very gentle ambulance men took over, kept my daughter going and got my partner and baby into hospital in 30 mins. She and her mum spent a month in intensive care in QE hospital in Woolwich.
So when people produce an incident where one thing in the NHS isn't quite right and they end up in a hospital that doesn't do emergencies, please remember that sometimes the NHS is utterly fantastic, that they saved my life (yes I'm that stupid), one daughter for certain and ensured that my premature daughter was OK. The total cost to me was £0. I do happen to pay rather a lot in taxes and don't begrudge a penny of it and would be happy to pay more in taxes to keep what is a fantastic organisation going. I earn more and expect to pay more for the services that a civilised socierty provides. Some people can't afford to pay, thats fine by me, I'll pay more, I do anyway through higher taxes. I recognise that many people do not share my views, but thats their issue.
I think that a civilised society should be judged not by how we treat the well off, but how we treat the less well off. To me health care is a fundamental right, like education, and that it should be funded properly. the NHS costs about 7% of UK GDP, I think the US costs 14%? is it twice as good for all?
As we now live in the north, we do fund raise for NWAA and Alder Hey. Alder hey has lots of Liverpool footballers supporting it, so we tend to do the NWAA.
The NHS is not perfect, but I'm grateful for it.
Rob