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#41 (permalink) | ||
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Moderator
Join Date: Jan 2005
Location: Birmingham
Posts: 4,506
Party: UKIP
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Whether this is better for the health of the nation I don’t know. There is another point I will concede about dentists that would reduce the cost to the consumer, why do we need to constantly have check ups ,we don’t have 6 monthly heart and brain scans. Crickey you’ll make a raging capitalist out of me yet. |
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#42 (permalink) | |
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Member
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BAW: exactly. I don't think some people quite grasp how it works in inner-cities, or large cities, or in city-council estates. Quite different to rural or suburban upbringing. Different priorites, often, and different concerns.
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), but single mothers (to quote a cliche) living on the paltry child support benefits, not really in a position to be in full-time work, can scarce afford to feed their kids, let alone well, and let alone go to the dentists themselves (except for when they DO have a gum or tooth problem and physically HAVE to go). Saying its all their own fault, or they aren't trying hard enough is all well and good (and often at least part-true), but it isn't exactly a solution to the problem. |
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#43 (permalink) | |||||
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Senior Member
Join Date: Jan 2005
Location: Cowes
Posts: 1,272
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Quote:
Quote:
The free market price of a checkup would be pretty low - I suspect that most dentists would offer them free or as loss-leaders in order to get customers. It's a five minute job and shouldn't cost more than a fiver at most. Quote:
Technology should make things cheaper; medical technology has been driven quite the wrong way by the absence of "customer power" or a quantitatively priced market. |
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#44 (permalink) |
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Member
Join Date: Dec 2004
Location: Salisbury
Posts: 309
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I've been thinking on this private/nationalised industry business... someone shoot me down.
What we do is put a nationalised industry up for grabs. Everyone and anyone can set up a company to make a profit for themselves; and they take the risks that collapsing involves, and having their share of the market taken by leaner companies. This could mean for instance that where a company has a more efficient ward structure, it could run wards in two or three hospitals. (Note that I would not intend 'efficient' to mean 'cheap'; the equation would be sick patients in divided by healthy patients out). That company would be liable, etc, and in competition with anyone who thinks they can do a healthier ward. If the same principles were operating railways as roads?? Umpteen different bus companies all using the same roads, all in competition, all paying the Government for road repair via fuel tax. I know it's sort of happening now with railways. Very few of these companies clash over territory; when they do there's a price war, or there should be. And you get employee loyalty by hiring people the waitrose way... you make them partners, then they all have an interest in training and seeing efficiencies and returning customers. Odd thought number two... 'nationalise' doctors, dentists and opticians. Pay them from the government purse/ lottery money. Patients who need medical treatment come with a pay stoppage for as long as they are ill... Number three: independent inspectors travel the country on basic salary with a pay bonus for every discrepancy they find. |
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