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Zschopautaler 25 Sep 18 7.29pm | |
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To add to what the mcanuff said regarding German Health care system. Unemployment insurance and Pension insurance is deducted separately you must also pay a care insurance. On top of that Employers must take out insurance to cover accidents at work for their employeees
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Forest Hillbilly in a hidey-hole 26 Sep 18 4.41pm | |
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Originally posted by rob1969
Undoubtedly those at fault were the US suppliers and also the UK procuerers who failed to check the source properly. indeed, isn't that always the case ? Robert Maxwell, (Sir)Jimmy Savile, (Dame) Shirley Porter, (Sir)Philip Green, the Daniel Morgan case etc, etc ad nauseum. Edited by Forest Hillbilly (26 Sep 2018 4.43pm)
I disengage, I turn the page. |
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Mapletree Croydon 27 Sep 18 9.15am | |
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Originally posted by Zschopautaler
To add to what the mcanuff said regarding German Health care system. Unemployment insurance and Pension insurance is deducted separately you must also pay a care insurance. On top of that Employers must take out insurance to cover accidents at work for their employeees As I recall, the level of nursing is different. There is a high expectation for family support in German hospitals, the likes of which you don't see in the UK
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Mapletree Croydon 27 Sep 18 9.16am | |
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Originally posted by Badger11
That is the nub of the matter. Free at the point of need is something most of us would agree with. Are there better models out there to deliver that? Quite possibly many European countries have great healthcare systems which are either partly or fully privatised. Some of those countries are socialist / left leaning and don't seem to have a problem with this. In this country we cannot have a sensible debate about alternate systems. It's a pity that someone like the BBC doesn't do a proper investigation into what other European countries do and the pros and cons for that system versus ours. I think one of my issues with the current model is that too many people (including myself) do not pay anything for healthcare because we don't pay tax. If we had a proper National Health Insurance scheme then all adults should pay something for their healthcare. How much each person paid and who would be exempt is another debate but I don't buy into the argument that just because I paid tax last year I get a free ride this year. Try telling an insurance company they should pay your home contents claim because you paid your premiums in the past. If anyone has any knowledge of the systems in France, Germany, Scandinavia etc. I would be interested to hear. I have always argued there is no logic for National Insurance contributions to cut out at retirement age.
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Midlands Eagle 27 Sep 18 10.42am | |
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Originally posted by Mapletree
I have always argued there is no logic for National Insurance contributions to cut out at retirement age. Whoever changes that so that NI is payable on pensions will undoubtedly lose the next election
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orpingtoneagle Orpington 27 Sep 18 11.43am | |
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Originally posted by Forest Hillbilly
"Emotional testimonies from people infected with HIV and hepatitis have been heard at the start of the inquiry into the contaminated blood scandal. The public inquiry is looking at how thousands of NHS patients were given infected blood products during the 1970s and 1980s in what has been dubbed the worst-ever NHS treatment disaster. In a video played to the inquiry, one man described how he felt he lost his entire life after finding out at the age of 43 that he had been infected with hepatitis C when he was a child." (BBC website, 24 Sept 201
I really needed that blood transfusion, and as soon as I was 18 I began repaying the debt by donating. Some people have religious beliefs which prevent blood transfusion, but when you need it,..your mindset may change. (nearly there) So my point is this. The people claiming compensation for getting infected blood. Has their life-span been extended because they had a transfusion. In probably most cases 'YES'. If they had been given free-choice at the time of having a transfusion, knowing the risks, probably most would have said 'YES'. Yes understand the points being made but what if the blood was not given in a life threatening situation, it was given as treatment and had it not been infected would have resulted in successful treatment. If you have something wrong with you which you know could kill you, you can use that knowledge to take preventative measures. You should not expect as part of that treatment to be infected with something far worse. I actually knew someone who had kidney problems who was treated with infected blood. He passed away with complications brought on by HIV leaving a young wife and 2 kids. His 'treatment,' killed him.
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