As someone living in socialized healthcare, and who has lived with socialized healthcare in about a dozen countries, just a reminder:

**Socialized Healthcare is a broken and backwards system**

inb4: No I am not promoting the american healthcare system. It may fix or address the parts that are broken in socialized healthcare, but it has its own problems... There are solutions (though no one talks about it) that doesnt resemble either of these failed systems.

Problems I have repeatidly faced both here and in other socialized health care countries:

* Abusive wait times leading to unnecessary suffering and in my case surgery that wouldnt have been needed if I had prompter care.

* Lack of access to many prescriptions - (I have had at least a dozen medicines I couldnt get because the cost would be too much of a burden to a socialized system).

* Monopolies making unfair and abusive rules to line their pockets at the expense of patients (A good example of this is melatonin being a prescription in Israel due to a pharmecutical monopoly).

* Lack of privacy / anonymity - Since everything is registered through centralized systems (usually) there is no way for you to hide or keep private your medical records. In the USA I would pay cash for prescriptions I dont want on record, not really an option in socialized systems.

@freemo I'm not sure I agree with this.
* Healthcare is "free at the point of use" to patients. That's the whole point of the UK system. So there is no cost to the patient to jack up, even if you're going to regard a nationalised monopoly as still a monopoly.
* An effective monopoly on medicine purchase under socialised systems means that pharma companies have to negotiate sensibly on price. Just look at what insulin costs in the US vs. the rest of the developed world: worldpopulationreview.com/coun
* You say that you can't get prescriptions because they're too expensive. Is it that they're too expensive, or that they're regarded as not cost-effective? The UK health system will pay for some very expensive drugs, where the proven benefit is there. Where the benefit is marginal, those resources are used elsewhere. It's all very well saying that you can't get expensive drugs, but that has to be set against the situation in a privatised system, where people who cannot afford [comprehensive] health cover won't be able to access any drugs or treatment at all. Does your right to buy expensive insurance that covers marginal therapies in unlikely situations trump their right to access proven and cost-effective therapies? You can of course still buy that expensive insurance if you want to, nobody's stopping you.
* Waiting times are certainly a problem in the UK at the moment. But that's a feature of a long-term failure to adequately resource the service. When the last Labour government left office in 2010, waiting times for almost everything were short. The Conservative government since then has deliberately under-funded the NHS, with the result that waiting times have soared. If you want healthcare it has to be paid for, and that's as true under a socialised system as under a private one.
* Privacy... I'm not at all convinced that a private system is better at this. At least the public system has to admit what it's doing with your data. Amazon is in the healthcare game in the US now, did you know? theregister.com/2023/02/23/ama

Ultimately surely the difference is what it usually is for private vs. public debates: do you think the risks should be borne by the individual (in which case those who are unlucky on the dice roll for both wealth and health are screwed) or that it should be pooled by society (in which case it's a bit harder for the wealthy to get gold-plated-everything and/or they have to make contributions to everyone else's healthcare, but those less well off can get their health looked after too)?

@VoxDei

> Healthcare is “free at the point of use” to patients. That’s the whole point of the UK system. So there is no cost to the patient to jack up, even if you’re going to regard a nationalised monopoly as still a monopoly.

Only partly true.. take my example. In israel a pharmecutical companies own pretty pervasive monopolies. Melatonin is a cheap product to produce and means you wont need to buy more expensive drugs to help with sleep problems. So these pham monopolies have a motivation to harm the general public by making melatonin a prescription, preventing competition and requiring you to buy expensive drugs.

To say there is no cost to the patient at point of sale is kinda pointless because there IS a cost to the patient (usually in ones taxes) and that cost is distributed to everyone. So they do exactly that, jack up prices and those prices are just baked into your taxes so it "feels" like you never see it. But you are still paying for it one way or another.

> An effective monopoly on medicine purchase under socialised systems means that pharma companies have to negotiate sensibly on price. Just look at what insulin costs in the US vs. the rest of the developed world: worldpopulationreview.com/coun

We covered this in the last post, on the one hand, yes it can mean more negotiating power to bring prices down. But those same monopolies can negotiate scenarios that line their pockets and harm the individual (as the example with melatonin above).

> You say that you can’t get prescriptions because they’re too expensive. Is it that they’re too expensive, or that they’re regarded as not cost-effective? The UK health system will pay for some very expensive drugs, where the proven benefit is there. Where the benefit is marginal, those resources are used elsewhere. It’s all very well saying that you can’t get expensive drugs, but that has to be set against the situation in a privatised system, where people who cannot afford [comprehensive] health cover won’t be able to access any drugs or treatment at all. Does your right to buy expensive insurance that covers marginal therapies in unlikely situations trump their right to access proven and cost-effective therapies? You can of course still buy that expensive insurance if you want to, nobody’s stopping you.

Its that they are too expensive.. in many cases we are talking drugs with very clear benefits. Take zalepalon vs zolpidem as an example. They are the same class of drugs and very similar. Zalepalon is less common and more expensive so you cant get it in many socialized medicine countries. But its application is vital as it has half the half-life of zolpidem. so for people with sleep disorders that are regulatory (time-shift) zolpidem not long cant treat it but makes symptoms worse where zalepalon can be a very effective treatment, but you cant get it despite the clear medical need due to costs.

> Waiting times are certainly a problem in the UK at the moment. But that’s a feature of a long-term failure to adequately resource the service. When the last Labour government left office in 2010, waiting times for almost everything were short. The Conservative government since then has deliberately under-funded the NHS, with the result that waiting times have soared. If you want healthcare it has to be paid for, and that’s as true under a socialised system as under a private one.

It really isnt though. There is a reason that every single socialized healthcare around the world, with almost no exceptions has significantly longer wait times than non-socialized. If it were limited to mismanagement then we would expect at least a few countries to have wait times on par or better than the USA, but thats just not what we see.

@freemo We've gone off the end of my knowledge of the subject at this point, I just don't have the knowledge of specifics like that. A quick Google turns up lots of references to Zalepalon's marketing authorisation being withdrawn in the UK but little as to why - I would normally assume that's because it was found to be unsafe in some way, because it's not just that the NHS won't buy it, it's that you can't legally sell it here.

On wait times, again I don't have the knowledge to debate it. I do wonder though whether the US having shorter wait times is a function of supply and demand under a privatised health system - the price goes up until enough people have been priced out of the given procedure that the wait time is low. If the wait time is higher the provider might as well jack the price up, because they know that even if they lose a few patients, they'll still be selling as many procedures as they have capacity to perform, and therefore they will make more money.

@VoxDei In most socialized systems ive known enough about to comment (the UK isnt one) if the socialized insurance doesnt want to cover a prescription then it isnt legally allowed at all. I have never personally seen a situation where a prescription drug is legally permitted for prescription but under no circumstances covered by the insurance.

As for wait times in america, despite the reasons, which is speculative at best, the fact is havibg a financial deterrant results in much improved wait times. You can view it in reverse where if you make healthcare practically free then people will seek care for nonissues like mild colds and backlog the system. This is somethibg i see often in socialized systems where jobs often require you to bring in a doctors note to get a day off. Since its so cheap the job doesnt see this as a burden on the employees and you see a huge amount of people seeing doctors for runny noses backlogging the system. In america the idea of requiring a doctors note is just absurd.

@freemo Well that I can speak to in the UK. Here you only need a doctor's note if you're off for seven consecutive days - less than that and you can self-certify that you were ill. Employers are not allowed to require a doctor's note for shorter periods.

In regard to obtaining treatments, there are two things here:

1) The medical marketing authorisation, which process confirms that your drug or treatment is safe and may be sold in the UK. It may require a prescription, but if you can't get it on the NHS for some reason (eg. you want it faster than you can get an NHS prescription) the you can obtain a private prescription that will allow you to buy the drug at full price.

2) The National Institute of health and Care Excellence (NICE) authorisation. NICE look at the cost-effectiveness of any given treatment. If they decide that it is cost-effective then they give permission for doctors to prescribe it on the NHS. If they don't then you cannot obtain that treatment on the NHS, but you can still do so privately.

In regard to Zalepalon, it is the first of these that has been withdrawn. As I understand it normally this would indicate some question mark over safety, but I'm not an expert so I may be wrong.

@VoxDei Yea that doesnt sound like it fixes the problem... Just sounds like there are two broken systems, and you are forced to pay for one (socialized) and have the option to also use the other broken system at an additional cost. I am not really hearing a solution here that addresses the fundemental issue of the two systems, for that we need something that is distinct from either.

Follow

@VoxDei Oh and for the record, zalepelon is widely regarded as being **safer** than zolpidem, especially in children.

Sign in to participate in the conversation
Qoto Mastodon

QOTO: Question Others to Teach Ourselves
An inclusive, Academic Freedom, instance
All cultures welcome.
Hate speech and harassment strictly forbidden.