
The findings of the study come as no shock to those who have campaigned to preserve the NHS publicly funded, says Dr Jacky Davis. Photograph: Alamy
As a complete-time employee of the NHS for a lot more than forty many years I was delighted to go through that the Washington-based mostly Commonwealth Fund, seeking at healthcare across the created world, puts the NHS in pole position total, in spite of astonishingly lower fees matched only by New Zealand (Expert panel costs NHS world’s greatest healthcare system, 18 June). This is a colossal achievement and probably represents the very best and most reasonable assessment of what the NHS is today – despite a lot of pressures and, of course, imperfections, still a exceptional mix of “quality, access and efficiency”. One require hardly add fairness and equity because this blazes out so obviously in comparing our program with, say, the US, where the extremely very best is outstandingly excellent (I worked there for a 12 months), but the peaks are obviously outweighed by the tragic and shameful troughs (I noticed these initial-hand too).
It is usually a pleasure to search soon after visitors from the US unexpectedly requiring emergency healthcare right here (I have knowledgeable this a lot of times in a lengthy job) and hear their comments – nearly usually a mixture of admiration and disbelief that our significantly-maligned healthcare technique can supply this kind of compassion and quality with no unwelcome and exhausting concerns of payment at the point of need to have.
My pride in reading through the report was much more-than-somewhat diminished not just by the unfair and repeated brickbats thrown at us by mainly hostile media coverage, but also, and far far more importantly, the threats posed by continual reorganisation and what numerous see as a gradual unravelling of the founding concepts of the NHS.
It truly is wonderful to see the robust report from Jeremy Hunt, who recognises that the wonderful difficult operate of NHS workers has now been effectively and impartially measured by international specialists, but we need to trumpet this great achievement far more entirely.
Large marks to the Guardian for the front-page story, but why relegate it to the foot of the webpage under the photo of a grieving Brazilian football fan?
Jeffrey Tobias
Professor of cancer medication, UCL, and advisor in clinical oncology, UCL NHS Hospitals Believe in
• Steve Richards hits the nail on the head (If folks come to feel powerless it is because they are, 18 June). Last 12 months I wrote to my regional MP and asked how choices have been produced about the amount and spot of GP practices. I was concerned because the developing of huge new estate had not been supported by a new, nearer, overall health facility. My MP advised me to get in touch with the clinical commissioning unit – even I knew that was incorrect – but I wrote and asked for my request to be passed on. I at some point spoke to an official. She was valuable but there was no way I could have recognized (or located out) that her particular workplace was accountable for GP practices. I invested the latter component of my job as an ombudsman’s investigator. If I could not locate out in which and how to trace this info, what hope, as Steve Richards says, for the patient who just desires to know why they are not able to get an appointment to see their medical doctor?
Maureen Panton
Malvern, Worcs
• The findings of the Commonwealth Fund’s most recent review come as no shock to those who have steadfastly campaigned to maintain our NHS publicly funded, publicly delivered and publicly accountable. The media now requirements to challenge the politicians’ mantra of “we can’t go on like this” and “we cannot afford the NHS”. We require fewer stories focusing on difficulties and far more celebrating the one.5 million patients noticed by the NHS every 36 hours. We need to have to inquire politicians: “If we cannot afford the NHS, now acknowledged as the most value-effective services, what are they suggesting we can afford?”
Dr Jacky Davis
Founder member, Preserve our NHS Public
• So the NHS has been rated the world’s greatest healthcare system? Its only black mark is its bad record on retaining individuals alive. Nothing at all significant then.
Christiane Goaziou
Wotton under Edge, Gloucestershire
Lead to for celebration as NHS is rated the ideal healthcare system | @guardianletters
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