How The United Kingdom's Health-Care System Works

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  • čas přidán 5. 06. 2024
  • As politicians in the US debate the best health-care policies to replace the current system, the United Kingdom’s National Health Service enjoys huge support from the vast majority of Britons. Despite the high reports of satisfaction with system, many in the UK are calling for reform of the NHS, especially following the UK’s departure from the European Union. Here’s how the NHS works and what reforms may be coming.
    CORRECTION (March 6, 2020): At 9:20, a video graphic misspelled the name of Holly Jarman, an assistant professor at the University of Michigan.
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    How The United Kingdom's Health-Care System Works

Komentáře • 7K

  • @amenhotepthethird209
    @amenhotepthethird209 Před 4 lety +5219

    I live in the UK, rarely use the NHS but love that it's there if I need it at almost no cost aside from general taxation. It's one of the best things about this country. Everyone has the equal rights to access quality healthcare and it's good to know that here at least, they do.

    • @saqibzaman1476
      @saqibzaman1476 Před 4 lety +157

      Exactly americans think if the doctors free they'll take advantage and keep on going which is not true. I haven't been to the doctors in years because gratefully I haven't needed to. But yes knowing it's there gives an ease of mind

    • @amenhotepthethird209
      @amenhotepthethird209 Před 4 lety +253

      @@saqibzaman1476 I don't even bother engaging with Americans on this subject. They have been so brainwashed by the politicians that they think it's some socialist game whereby the government decides who lives and dies. This is a perfect example of voting against your own interests and costing many times more for worse outcomes. Reducing live expectancy, increased deaths in childbirth, medical bankruptcy etc.

    • @saqibzaman1476
      @saqibzaman1476 Před 4 lety +71

      @@amenhotepthethird209 very true the american media and government has effectively brainwashed all the public into thinking government programmes are communist or something gand their freedoms will be taking away when it actual fact is more freedom u dont need to worry about health care etc

    • @amenhotepthethird209
      @amenhotepthethird209 Před 4 lety +78

      @@saqibzaman1476 I can't imagine what it feels like having to worry about getting sick. Not being able to afford to to to the doctors. Seemingly, many Americans don't agree that is a basic human right. Even Cuba has a national health system. It's a shame.

    • @DB-ug3pe
      @DB-ug3pe Před 4 lety +14

      @@amenhotepthethird209 it's the same with people who support the NHS. It is far from the best system in the world and the alternative is not the system in America.

  • @krpkrp3033
    @krpkrp3033 Před 4 lety +5585

    The NHS is the UK's one true religion we all believe in.

    • @Monkeyatemysoul23
      @Monkeyatemysoul23 Před 4 lety +208

      Krp Krp I think it’s the only thing that will make Brits riot if they try to take it from us that’s why they do a lot of under handed manovere!!

    • @thornimation5492
      @thornimation5492 Před 4 lety +47

      Krp Krp, absolutely, ever since the NHS was founded back in 1948, back in the Labour Government of Clement Atlee !

    • @AdamMGTF
      @AdamMGTF Před 4 lety +26

      ThorniMation indeed. But don’t think it was down to labour alone. The Bevin nhs was not meant to last. It was supposed to get the country fit and well and then be closed to return to the old system. However and thankfully it continued in perpetuity. Inspire of all parties using it as a political hot topic to the constant detriment of the NHS itself

    • @JH-su9vl
      @JH-su9vl Před 4 lety +9

      Yep across all political spectrums

    • @harrysinclair5426
      @harrysinclair5426 Před 4 lety +3

      Agreed

  • @asuspicioustype12classfrig80

    I’d rather wait a few hours in U.K. rather than being bankrupt

    • @ChrispyNut
      @ChrispyNut Před 3 lety +21

      If it was gonna make you bankrupt, you'd probably be waiting more than a few hours as U.S. system rations by wallet-size rather than need.

    • @ChrispyNut
      @ChrispyNut Před 3 lety +3

      @@wulfhere83 Ah, but I bet you had to wait until all your teeth had fallen out, before you got that appointment though, right cos of all the waiting lists /s

    • @natalielueders6502
      @natalielueders6502 Před 3 lety +13

      @@ChrispyNut Uh no? I can call my dentist and be seen the next day (Monday-Friday) or emergency appointments the same day (Monday-Sunday)

    • @ChrispyNut
      @ChrispyNut Před 3 lety

      @@natalielueders6502 I don't know whether you're replying to my first or second response. If first..... Big deal, without knowing how much you pay that's meaningless. If the second, "/s" = "sarcasm".

    • @aidansilversmith
      @aidansilversmith Před 3 lety +1

      yikes it's not a few hours buddy. It seems every other week the NHS leaves people in medical beds in hallways for weeks to months or until they die. I'm not sure how this video is positive on the NHS. If you wanna know how bad the NHS is just google "NHS in crisis" those articles come out every 3 and a half weeks in the UK

  • @LewisAtonn
    @LewisAtonn Před měsícem +984

    Investing can play a crucial role in helping individuals manage and keep up with healthcare expenses in the United States. By strategically allocating funds into investment vehicles such as health savings accounts (HSAs), individual retirement accounts (IRAs), and brokerage accounts, individuals can build a financial cushion to cover medical bills and unexpected healthcare costs. Moreover, investing in dividend-paying stocks, bonds, and real estate investment trusts (REITs) can generate passive income streams that can be earmarked for healthcare expenses. Additionally, investing in healthcare-focused mutual funds or exchange-traded funds (ETFs) allows individuals to capitalize on the growth potential of the healthcare sector while diversifying their investment portfolio. By adopting a proactive approach to investing and diligently managing their finances, individuals can better navigate the challenges of healthcare expenses and secure their financial well-being.

    • @tomaszcz_k
      @tomaszcz_k Před měsícem +3

      Certainly! Participating in investing is a critical component of financial planning, ensuring individuals can maintain their desired lifestyle and financial security during their retirement years and also to help battle health issues when you can no more work when you get ill.

    • @Windarti30
      @Windarti30 Před měsícem +3

      As old age draws near for me, it's essential to manage my retirement and savings. Since I'm a widower and no one to really care for me if i get ill so i need this to be able pay for good health care just in case. I'm Seeking trustworthy recommendations to avoid any mishandling would be incredibly helpful at this juncture..

    • @LewisAtonn
      @LewisAtonn Před měsícem +2

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    • @Windarti30
      @Windarti30 Před měsícem +2

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  • @Dino.808
    @Dino.808 Před 4 lety +2166

    As a British citizen, I'm very proud of the NHS. That's why whenever I hear a politician say they want to privatise the NHS I vote for whoever is running against them. Keep your slimy private hands off the NHS! Especially if they from the US we all know what they are like.

    • @DB-ug3pe
      @DB-ug3pe Před 4 lety +32

      Most NHS services have always been provided by private contractors. GPs. If a private company can provide a high quality service for less money why do you think we should keep paying more and getting less?

    • @ogc9649
      @ogc9649 Před 4 lety +22

      NHS is kind of a disaster. The quality of care is pretty terrible. Definitely one of the worst in Europe.

    • @TKUA11
      @TKUA11 Před 4 lety +3

      DK1 yet nhs buys drugs developed by US companies . If you love the NHS then pay the same prices that US citizens pay for their drugs

    • @ogc9649
      @ogc9649 Před 4 lety +10

      TK UA actually they buy generics of drugs developed in the US. US spends all the money developing new drugs and then other countries piggyback off of that.

    • @thomascrabtree
      @thomascrabtree Před 4 lety +94

      @@ogc9649 The US doesn't produce any drugs, go search it, there hasn't been a single drug made in the US since the last factory closed in the early 00's. The UK is actually a massive drugs researcher and exporter, it's one of the biggest parts of the UK's economy... We actually invent and sell drugs to the US.

  • @torranirwinnw5422
    @torranirwinnw5422 Před 4 lety +1374

    The NHS is one of our proudest achievements

    • @abidfokrul
      @abidfokrul Před 4 lety +1

      Torran Irwin NW5 surely it is.

    • @AtheistEve
      @AtheistEve Před 4 lety +17

      Torran Irwin NW5 Pity that successive tory and neoliberal governments have been quietly gutting it whilst the adoring British public pretend it isn’t happening and continue to vote for more austerity for the many.
      All government ministers should be forced to use publicly-owned schools and healthcare providers. Then we might see some proper investment.

    • @OnlyGrafting
      @OnlyGrafting Před 4 lety +2

      @@AtheistEve I'm sure they'll have realised how important support for the NHS really is once the pandemic blows over. Took a huge chunk off their money simply because they wouldn't invest properly in it before hand and I doubt they'll let a mistake like that happen again if they can help it.

    • @AtheistEve
      @AtheistEve Před 4 lety +7

      Logan R I doubt it. People continue to vote against their best interests every time.

    • @sunseeker9581
      @sunseeker9581 Před 4 lety +3

      @@OnlyGrafting the tories always want to make cuts. Its in their DNA

  • @lazaruslong1960
    @lazaruslong1960 Před 3 lety +869

    About 30 years ago (yes, I'm old), I was working alongside some American guys on a job here in the UK. Unfortunately one of these guys had an accident and quite badly damaged hi hand- blood every where in spurts level of damage.
    The first aid guy on our crew got a pressure bandage on the damage and and said that he needed to go to hospital and that he would call an ambulance. The American guy freaked out. The firm that he worked for had not provided medical cover for their team while working abroad, and while his colleagues had taken out medical insurance, he hadn't, so he was panicking about how he would pay for an ambulance and treatment.
    We explained to him, that, technically as a non Brit he should be charged for treatment, the reality was that in the NHS they very, very rarely did this. In fact they tended NOT to ask about nationality etc, and that it would cost him nothing.
    He was taken to hospital, having had more work done on his injury by the paramedics who came.
    He came back to the worksite the following day. He was all bandaged up, and couldn't really work, but he wanted to hear again how we, could afford to offer treatment that would probably cost at the very least several hundred dollars.
    It took him a while to get his head round how the NHS is funded.
    2 years later I ran into the same guy on another work site . He had gone back to the States and looked into how Britain was run, education, healthcare, policing etc. He made the decision that although he loved the USA, he decided to emigrate to the UK with his wife and their daughter because he could see that here we, have very similar ideals to the USA, but are a safer country to live and raise a family.
    His daughter (and her 2 brothers who were born here) are British citizens.

    • @georgenicholls5580
      @georgenicholls5580 Před 3 lety +85

      Great story! I'm definitely very proud to live in the UK with the NHS

    • @farismalik4857
      @farismalik4857 Před 3 lety +50

      I'm glad I read this 👍 big up NHS 💪

    • @barbaravyse660
      @barbaravyse660 Před 3 lety +19

      I’m an American and got food poisoning or a tummy virus last year while in London. Had to go to the emergency room and wasn’t charged anything. My biggest criticism is the lack of empathy the front desk employees displayed. Here in Miami , the waiting room staff make sure you are comfortable (i.e. get you a blanket, barf bag) while waiting.

    • @drzej3k794
      @drzej3k794 Před 3 lety +70

      Barbara Vyse with visits to NHS hospitals etc they will expect you to sort yourself out in some respects such as keeping pressure on a wound or bringing water or food with you especially if you are waiting to be admitted. If your not a serious case then, you generally have to have a bit of common sense and a stiff upper lip. In the U.K. there is very much a “just get on with it” attitude for a lot of things.

    • @lzh4950
      @lzh4950 Před 3 lety +7

      Reminds me in my country where some employers & doctors have been called out for giving their employees only 2 days of MC for worksite accidents, when their injuries actually require additional MC, because my country's legislation allows employers to not report worksite accidents if the MC given is less than 3 days

  • @Josh-oj9mm
    @Josh-oj9mm Před 3 lety +433

    American politics:
    1% actually doing anything
    99% circlejerking on whether something is "socialism" or "capitalism"

    • @Symphiney
      @Symphiney Před 3 lety +29

      I don't think many of these Americans actually understand the differences between these economic systems. They're just taught "capitalism good, socialism bad".

    • @aliveandunwell430
      @aliveandunwell430 Před 3 lety +1

      “I will never forgive the politicians!”

    • @nxronite9994
      @nxronite9994 Před 3 lety +2

      You're right. Many of us here are ignorant and propagandized by corporate media.

    • @Sarge084
      @Sarge084 Před 3 lety +8

      The problem is that Americans have been conditioned to think that socialism is the same as soviet communism, that politics is a simple black and white choice with no shades of grey in between. That's why the rest of the world laughs when Bernie Sanders is described as "far left"!

    • @Ilaunchnukes
      @Ilaunchnukes Před 2 lety +1

      @@Sarge084 then how come almost every attempt at socialism has failed? And don't tell me Europe is socialist, they have some of the best business and free market environments on Earth.

  • @joshius7047
    @joshius7047 Před 4 lety +1531

    I could never imagine getting a bill when leaving the hospital. Why do America hate this idea?

    • @SK-zy2ri
      @SK-zy2ri Před 4 lety +66

      Exactly it's stupid but Americans knows best

    • @itsonlysound
      @itsonlysound Před 4 lety +94

      It's frightening, isn't it? As if being sick and in hospital isn't awful enough, extra stress is piled on top of you.

    • @C-RENITY
      @C-RENITY Před 4 lety +59

      @@ashlyr4385 fear of socialism even though the UK is far from socialist except really for the NHS? Pretty much everything else I can think of has been privatised. Come on American citizens wake up its the best thing since sliced bread

    • @mattkennedy6115
      @mattkennedy6115 Před 4 lety +23

      Americans are afraid that they’re taxes will go up and they’ll be limited by choice. Change is scary and this would be a huge change. Also the powers that be have everything to gain by keeping the system here status quo so they highlight and regurgitate all the shortcomings of medical care in the UK, Canada, France etc. to further instill fear in the American populace. What’s really messed up is how we call this a free market system. It’s not free market. I can’t price compare procedures from one hospital to another, Health Insurance companies can’t compete with each other across state lines thus lowering premiums. We also can’t legally (although this is more frowned upon than enforced) purchase drugs from other countries. Why? Because the government says we can’t. If Socialism is equated with authoritarianism then how’s that for the latter?

    • @joevictor53
      @joevictor53 Před 4 lety +25

      Joshius from what I understand, they think they'll be paying a huge amount for other people through taxes. They don't seem to understand that we don't pay ridiculous amounts of taxes for this in countries like the UK

  • @LD-bj4xc
    @LD-bj4xc Před 4 lety +1027

    As a teenager from the UK I would like to put my perspective forward,i was born into a family of 4 siblings raised by divorced parents so we didn’t have much money, none of my siblings had any needs from the NHS however I had a form of cancer in my ear, 2 asthma attacks, grommets, tonsillitis and pneumonia all of which in between the space of 2 years. I would have died if I had lived in America as my bill would have come to around £300,000 minimum. My family members will no doubt pay the government back on the cost of these via tax rather than profit going to private companies that would overcharge or have simply left me to die. I owe my life to the NHS and the great staff who cared for me
    Edit: after other people mentioned these things there’s other things I’ve forgotten such a braces, the time I fainted and the 4 teeth I needed removing, there is also things all the checks my mother would have had if I was born in hospital like my siblings(born in my moms bedroom) and vaccines and asthma inhalers along with multiple of my grommets falling out days after surgery.I’ve never had any problems with ambulance times and it’s agreed that it’s a matter of government spending,most people want more funding for the NHS which is why every political party has it in their manifesto

    • @Bruss390
      @Bruss390 Před 4 lety +37

      My Thoughts wish more people saw this

    • @ronaldparry6147
      @ronaldparry6147 Před 4 lety +61

      Best thing I’ve read. I also owe so much to the NHS, my dad has had 3 heart attacks, my mum spent almost 4 months in hospital with leg problems, I’ve had countless asthma attacks and we’re all on medication. For me alone, my inhalers would cost around £200 a month, and as a student who works part time, you would have to make a choice between breathing or an education.

    • @amakabeibe
      @amakabeibe Před 4 lety +5

      ❤️❤️❤️

    • @lydiaah6282
      @lydiaah6282 Před 4 lety +25

      Same here. My family have had to deal with ‘little’ things like broken elbows all they way up to having a pacemaker fitted( after having to call an ambulance basically every year for 4 years as my brothers heart kept stopping) My sister worked for the NHS as a midwife before she left giving many years to the service. Is it perfect? No- having a family member who works for the NHS shows you that. But I am forever thankful for it and for all the people behind it.

    • @khalebrobertson9907
      @khalebrobertson9907 Před 4 lety +7

      I too have suffered through the trauma of grommets... in all seriousness though you must be an absolute beast to have survived all that, even with the NHS

  • @JCstone1000
    @JCstone1000 Před 3 lety +197

    I find it totally bizarre to hear the NHS described as some impossible dream. It’s your right. Literally what is the point of schools, roads, police, firemen, if you’re dead

    • @Saliem02
      @Saliem02 Před 2 lety +2

      Ok look at it from the perspective of someone who has lived in the US all their life and paying large amounts of money for healthcare is all we have ever known, we didn't choose to be born here but we were and this is the life we know and so free healthcare is a foreign concept to us that seems like a pipe dream.

    • @adambrickell6425
      @adambrickell6425 Před 2 lety

      Healthcare is not a right! It's a commodity! No one should be forced to care of anyone else unless they want to.

    • @comradekenobi6908
      @comradekenobi6908 Před 2 lety

      @@Saliem02 sad

    • @RealFemale69
      @RealFemale69 Před 2 lety +8

      @@adambrickell6425 The UN, and therefore every nation, agrees it is a right

    • @Zureta5
      @Zureta5 Před 9 měsíci

      Every country in the world have those "benefits" because they pay taxes. US is better, or so they think.
      Greetings from Brazil.

  • @liberallarry847
    @liberallarry847 Před 3 lety +129

    "Reforming the NHS" simply means deciding how to adequately fund it. It does not mean fundamentally changing the system.

    • @ecg865
      @ecg865 Před 3 lety +1

      “Reforming” the NHS means destroying it or changing it so much that it’s not the same system anymore. “Reforming” is just a word to sugarcoat it. 🧐

    • @meandthepotatoes4916
      @meandthepotatoes4916 Před 2 lety

      So much middle management in the NHS they could cull and give the nurses more

    • @skellurip
      @skellurip Před rokem

      reforming nhs is euphemism of making it more like american health care system

  • @avocatobobble
    @avocatobobble Před 4 lety +710

    The NHS is one of the few things that make me proud to be British. Everybody working at the NHS are the real living superheroes of today.

    • @nativenewlondoner
      @nativenewlondoner Před 4 lety +6

      BB Entertainment Indeed 👍

    • @LS-bw7jt
      @LS-bw7jt Před 4 lety +17

      We're british and proud

    • @Salena905
      @Salena905 Před 4 lety +12

      @@hobmoor2042 yeah I agree, fed up with the slightest thing and they're down on our country as if we are rotten or pathetic. We can't win sometimes.
      But I love this country and there's more good, kind people living here than horrible, racist etc people. Let them moan,we know the truth and we're proud. 🇬🇧❤️💙💜💛🧡💚👏👏

    • @simmer484
      @simmer484 Před 4 lety +6

      Many great people work for the NHS but in reality not everyone working in the NHS is a hero. Keep in mind that there is an army of non clinical NHS workers in which the spread of good people who add value is about the same as private companies in my experience.

    • @khoo7732
      @khoo7732 Před 4 lety +9

      Here here. I would rather pay more tax and keep our healthcare. It’s such an important part of our country and I wouldn’t want anyone having to decide between being well or bankrupt!

  • @user-or1tp7cx8u
    @user-or1tp7cx8u Před 4 lety +1400

    I work for the NHS. Believe me when I say it's not perfect. We're understaffed and underfunded. But we get the job done! The NHS is arguably the best British creation. God bless 🇬🇧 and 🇺🇸

    • @fkatwigsisthequeenofenglan4748
      @fkatwigsisthequeenofenglan4748 Před 4 lety +9

      nothing great about Britain. I appreciate you guys and what you do & understand why many of you guys leave to go to Australia and wherever else but the people put the NHS even more at risk cus they don't like seeing people like me and you, Tahmed, in 'their country'

    • @mitch2413
      @mitch2413 Před 4 lety +47

      fka twigs is the queen of england I reckon hopefully we will see greater funding to NHS after COVID-19 passes over. But who knows.

    • @MRHJS
      @MRHJS Před 4 lety +45

      fka twigs is the queen of england if you think there is nothing great. Leave.

    • @amoosed99
      @amoosed99 Před 4 lety +33

      @@fkatwigsisthequeenofenglan4748 I agree. So many people in the UK have completely unjustified prejudice towards foreigners however, I don't believe it is something that stains the entire country. There are plenty of people who appreciate anyone here in Britain regardless of race, religion or nationality

    • @The_Greedy_Orphan
      @The_Greedy_Orphan Před 4 lety +8

      @Tahmed, thank you for your work during this difficult time.

  • @valentinenew9973
    @valentinenew9973 Před 3 lety +194

    The NHS is absolutely amazing and makes me extremely proud to be British!
    Healthcare is a right not a luxury.

    • @stitches768
      @stitches768 Před 3 lety +9

      Damn right about that

    • @carl4243
      @carl4243 Před 2 lety

      Lol NHS is a failure.

    • @maxmccann5323
      @maxmccann5323 Před 2 lety +2

      @@carl4243 at least it actually exists 👀

    • @handzar6402
      @handzar6402 Před 2 lety

      The NHS is garbage, it needs to die.

    • @dominicj7977
      @dominicj7977 Před 2 lety

      @@handzar6402
      And then replace it with what?

  • @andykenny5674
    @andykenny5674 Před 3 lety +79

    I’m from the U.K., and one of the things that makes me proud to be British is the NHS. No it’s not free, and yes we all have to pay for it - but I wouldn’t have it any other way.

    • @Mashmarriner69
      @Mashmarriner69 Před 3 lety +4

      I would much rather pay an extra couple of hundred pounds a month (which we don't even think about) to have the NHS. Than be on my deathbed and have to remortgage my home to pay for my healthcare

    • @Kingofthenet2
      @Kingofthenet2 Před 8 měsíci +1

      @@Mashmarriner69agreed

  • @maybaby13x
    @maybaby13x Před 4 lety +313

    When you look at the difference in UK vs US healthcare, remember no one in the UK has ever taken an Uber to hospital in an emergency because they’re worried about an ambulance bill.

    • @paulching8795
      @paulching8795 Před 4 lety +19

      The ambulances are either run by the NHS (e.g. LAS) or working with the NHS (St John etc.) and therefore free of charge. Nobody should take an Uber to A&E because of car accidents or heart attacks.

    • @lucisano
      @lucisano Před 4 lety +11

      I've taken an Uber to the hospital in a "non emergency"
      I broke my arm. I did not need to waste the time of an ambulance when a taxi was faster.

    • @Sam-gf6ue
      @Sam-gf6ue Před 4 lety +6

      @@lucisano well you wouldn't be able to get an ambulance most likely unless you couldn't physically leave your house without support.

    • @shelleyphilcox4743
      @shelleyphilcox4743 Před 4 lety +16

      People in the UK dont call an ambulance unless its needed. Basic breaks, injuries etc they would get a lift to A&E. Worse breaks for hips or legs, head injury, stroke, heart attack, breathing problems etc, they would call an ambulance. It depends on urgency of the problem, suitability of appropriate transport and proximity to the A&E dept.

    • @grahvis
      @grahvis Před 4 lety +3

      It should be taken into account that, depending on the nature of the emergency, treatment starts the moment the person enters the ambulance.
      I once had to call an ambulance to get my disabled neighbour off the floor after she had fallen.

  • @jogolock1190
    @jogolock1190 Před 4 lety +927

    The USA has the biggest defence budget in the world, all American's contribute to that via their taxes, so Uncle Sam has a socialised defence budget. Go figure.

    • @TheWeepingDalek
      @TheWeepingDalek Před 3 lety +73

      The president himself is paid via taxes. Meaning the leader is socialised

    • @Inurendo88
      @Inurendo88 Před 3 lety +59

      Don't get me started on their commie roads. Highways are a soviet plot I tell you.

    • @NAUM1
      @NAUM1 Před 3 lety +3

      The US does have the largest defense budget, and it helps other countries more than our own. Imagine the day we stop having military bases abroad and other countries have to start footing the bill for their own protection. We are the developed country that relies the least amount on international trade. I am one for our country to stop defending other countries and let them take over and see how it turns out. And we could fund our healthcare with that money. But oh wait, I forget we already spend more on Medicare and Medicaid than our defense budget. And those are for the elderly and the poor. Maybe it is more than just taking away military spending.

    • @Inurendo88
      @Inurendo88 Před 3 lety +40

      @@NAUM1 the reason your healthcare costs so much more is the fact that you allow hospitals, doctors, and big pharma to set their own prices. One of the advantages of universal healthcare is that your country has the ability to negotiate down those prices on your behalf.
      When you are sick your ability to drive the price of treatment is effectively zero. But the government has a pretty effective bargaining chip. Us. The entire population of your country. Either you give us treatment at a price that we believe is fair, or you lose access to the entire population. Considering that in my country I pay less than half for my healthcare than you do, and we experience far better outcomes, it seems to be working.

    • @bobs182
      @bobs182 Před 3 lety +14

      @@NAUM1 The US didn't help anyone by FUBARing Iraq.

  • @FionaMu
    @FionaMu Před 3 lety +192

    "longer to see GP's" - Lol I can call my GP at 8am tomorrow and see them same day. I had a bad kidney infection last year and needed to see someone asap on a weekend. I called 111 and went to an out of hours GP surgery few hours later and got the free medication I needed to feel better within 48 hours.

    • @charlesbentley6033
      @charlesbentley6033 Před 3 lety +9

      Depends were you are though. In some areas, theres one practice for multiple areas with high driving times. And in places like London, ive felt that it can take a while. Though overall I do prefer our system

    • @jameshughes5722
      @jameshughes5722 Před 3 lety +14

      Average wait to see a doctor in the US is 24 days. in the uk it's 15 days. The waiting list in the uk is a myth it's comparable with the US or better in most cases the only part of the american health system that is better is at the sharp end of the system with state of the art devices and treatments. Treatments and devises most Americans can't actually afford. In order for this to happen they lower the levels of care at the very bottom the idea in the US of preventative care is none existent. You make more money in treatment than you do insuring people don't get sick. In the Uk the NHS save money preventing illness so that is the approach they take. Mental health care in the US is a joke as well.

    • @JohnCorrUK
      @JohnCorrUK Před 3 lety +3

      @@charlesbentley6033 There's NHS at Hand in London that deliveries services digitally with clinics around London if you need to see someone face to face.
      My 'ordinary' GP practice in West London now does most doctors calls by phone/ video - ring in the morning and get a callback later that morning ... Digital prescriptions mean your prescriptions can be fulfilled at a pharmacy anywhere in the country.
      Americans are being deceived by misleading emotive language - on the UK you have the right to free medical treatment and that can be delivered through a public or private provider.

    • @cyberash3000
      @cyberash3000 Před 3 lety +2

      I've never waited more than a day for a doctor. A good. For specialised issues I've had to wait a week or two but it was none urgent.

    • @kdog4587
      @kdog4587 Před 3 lety +2

      Same here. Called regarding my son this morning at 9, appointment at 11.40. Can't argue with that

  • @illegitimateotaku794
    @illegitimateotaku794 Před 3 lety +266

    Bernie Sanders is a godsend for Americans and they don't even realise it. The US is missing out and it's sad.

    • @nabilmiah4428
      @nabilmiah4428 Před 3 lety +8

      I'm from the UK and agree with free healthcare. But the issue is in the US Bernie's plan is too fast and too destructive. Yes, you should move towards a system that provides cheap/free healthcare however you need to also take care of those who work in the private insurance industry that would get shut down. Your countries system has been the same for so long that it will take a while to introduce such a system hence Andrew Yang's plan should have been taken more seriously.

    • @illegitimateotaku794
      @illegitimateotaku794 Před 3 lety +18

      @@meganwallace5556 I know, I just wish the Democrats had Bernie instead of Biden.

    • @jamesburge9145
      @jamesburge9145 Před 3 lety

      Nbernje sounds nice but he can't get his policies to add up and that's a major issue like Blair labour that can leave a country bankrupt

    • @Jemalacane0
      @Jemalacane0 Před 3 lety

      No he isn't.

    • @alexlivesey6821
      @alexlivesey6821 Před 3 lety +5

      @@Jemalacane0 such an astute argument. Well done sir. You win.

  • @CharlieFlemingOriginal
    @CharlieFlemingOriginal Před 4 lety +330

    I work at a theatre and an American shocked me when she said people with epilepsy in the U.S wear bracelets saying "DONT call an ambulance" as they can't afford the bills. I was shocked that supposedly "the greatest country in the world" doesn't care for the health of it's people. Furthermore I have only needed hospitalisation ONCE and that was to have a tooth out... I didn't have to pay... never ONCE in 35 years have I spent a second resenting that my tax is spent on free healthcare. Never!

    • @anthonyh4745
      @anthonyh4745 Před 4 lety +4

      You have to pay for dental treatment in the U.K, it’s about 50% subsidised by the NHS.

    • @grahvis
      @grahvis Před 4 lety +14

      There is a video made by an American living in the UK who has epilepsy.
      He described having the NHS as having a good friend when in need.

    • @grahammcvicar3804
      @grahammcvicar3804 Před 4 lety +20

      @@anthonyh4745 Not everyone pays for dental care in the UK

    • @COOLUKGAMER
      @COOLUKGAMER Před 4 lety +10

      @@anthonyh4745 Just to add on to another comment replying to yours. Typically only adults pay a fee of dental, or eye checkups. Otherwise for children, it is free and covered fully by the NHS (anyone under the age of 19). If it is a serious issue involving the eyes or teeth that will have you undergo an operation in a hospital, it will be covered by the NHS.
      Stuff for glasses such as lens thinning and anti-glare are add-ons to be paid for but are discounted iirc? Someone will have to correct me on that.

    • @alundavies8402
      @alundavies8402 Před 3 lety +3

      I am disabled and always injuring myself and the last time I seriously injured my body I never went to hospital because of the fares to hospital and so I didn’t get treated because I didn’t have enough money to get to hospital not because of the treatment

  • @SUPERRANDOMCLIP
    @SUPERRANDOMCLIP Před 4 lety +541

    Imagine playing football in the US and your mate puts a bad, mistimed tackle in that breaks your leg and bankrupts your family. Mind boggling that in the UK you would just pop down to A&E and leave later for FREE

    • @sp3ckedout224
      @sp3ckedout224 Před 4 lety +8

      SUPERRANDOMCLIP tbh you wouldn’t be playing football in the US...

    • @alastairp
      @alastairp Před 4 lety +2

      You don't know the meaning of the word free, also expect to wait 3 hours at a&e.

    • @Eliteerin
      @Eliteerin Před 4 lety +33

      @@alastairp it's cheap however, considering national insurance is so cheap

    • @alastairp
      @alastairp Před 4 lety

      @@Eliteerin Not for the rich, it's very expensive for them.

    • @ikebuttle360
      @ikebuttle360 Před 4 lety +53

      @@alastairp only experience I've had was when I broke my ankle, ambulance called, rushed in right away, x-rayed etc within the hour of it happening, stayed the night, was operated on and left by morning, couldn't have been more efficient

  • @sakhawatrahman4961
    @sakhawatrahman4961 Před 3 lety +296

    Bernie Sanders is not Far-Left, he would be considered regular left here in the UK.
    Edit: He’s not as far left as former Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn was. But Sanders is still far left enough to lose an election.

    • @saasda6255
      @saasda6255 Před 3 lety +18

      Not even really left maybe free college is bit left but the rest is quite normal

    • @saasda6255
      @saasda6255 Před 3 lety

      @Graham, King of the Britons! yeah its strange

    • @lochsidefishing5103
      @lochsidefishing5103 Před 3 lety +3

      @@saasda6255 You got free college and university tuition in Scotland.

    • @tallthinkev
      @tallthinkev Před 3 lety +7

      @@lochsidefishing5103 You also get Wee Krankie and her 'It's all England's fault.'

    • @randomk7198
      @randomk7198 Před 3 lety

      @@tallthinkev written by an english person

  • @ethanmartin1481
    @ethanmartin1481 Před 3 lety +165

    “No society can legitimately call itself civilised if a sick person is denied medical aid because of a lack of means.”

    • @latom-sensei2554
      @latom-sensei2554 Před 3 lety +6

      I really wonder if 'the right to life' is actually a right in the USA

    • @Saliem02
      @Saliem02 Před 2 lety +3

      They don't deny anyone medical aid, they will just take all of your money after they save your life

    • @comradekenobi6908
      @comradekenobi6908 Před 2 lety

      @@Saliem02 lmao what you smokin

    • @carl4243
      @carl4243 Před 2 lety

      Lol NHS is a failure.

    • @comradekenobi6908
      @comradekenobi6908 Před 2 lety +2

      @@carl4243 source?

  • @mokkymiah2742
    @mokkymiah2742 Před 4 lety +454

    I rarely use the NHS but I am more than happy to continue paying my taxes to support the NHS as it benefits everyone in my country.

    • @banshee1998
      @banshee1998 Před 4 lety +2

      Like people who eat themselves to oblivion and require intensive care once they develop severe heart disease? Yeah no thanks.

    • @niallschiefler8636
      @niallschiefler8636 Před 4 lety +51

      #00FF00GRAVITY Unlike America that doesn’t happen much here.

    • @danwbeeston6146
      @danwbeeston6146 Před 4 lety +45

      @@banshee1998 Yep even them. Bad decisions doesn't mean we should let something die. Society has a duty to help those in need

    • @ellamedley7558
      @ellamedley7558 Před 4 lety +40

      @@banshee1998 yes. Because a tiny amount is going to them. A large amount is going to the teenager who was just involved in a hit and run. The parents can stay by their bed side and care for them. Or the chronically ill child with cancer, who can stay in hospital for months at a time undergoing intense treatment and it not cost a penny. Or the palative care for the 89 year old grandma that means she is comfortable in her last hours. Or the team that saves a mother and her child in a complex delivery. Not to mention the mental heath care that just stopped a 22 year old man from killing himself

    • @ellamedley7558
      @ellamedley7558 Před 4 lety

      @Aj you comments don't make much sense

  • @jess4709
    @jess4709 Před 4 lety +287

    I’m a U.K. citizen and I’d never heard of the term “socialised medicine” until today. Don’t knock the NHS, we’re all generally happy with it.

    • @krashd
      @krashd Před 4 lety +4

      If it's payed for by everyone and available to everyone then it is socialised, just like the police, fire department, military, schools, libraries, etc. All socialised.

    • @jess4709
      @jess4709 Před 4 lety +22

      Rob Fraser and what’s the issue with that though... Americans use this phrase like socialised medicine is a *bad* thing. But having education, emergency services etc available to everyone isn’t really bad is it? How can equal access be bad? What we’re seeing in America is those who can not afford health care are being unfairly disadvantaged and are in a much much worse position. This would never happen in the UK because *everybody* has access to healthcare, regardless of their socioeconomic background.

    • @krashd
      @krashd Před 4 lety +9

      @@jess4709 There is no issue with it. Conservative Americans just don't like socialism because they are told to by the rich US aristocracy. In the early 1900's socialist and communist movements spread around the world as working class people decided to seize power from the ultra rich. In the US they at first criminalised socialists as "communist sympathisers" until that was deemed unconstitutional and then they tried to limit exposure to socialism by blacklisting anyone on TV or radio who spoke about it.
      Eventually they discovered that you could just brainwash the masses by convincing them that socialism was created by Satan or that being socialist means living like the North Koreans do. The billionaires that pull the strings will do anything to protect their obscene profits, much of which they get from charging sick people.

    • @jess4709
      @jess4709 Před 4 lety +3

      Rob Fraser ... we’re not socialist? We have a conservative government that still supports the NHS (I say ‘support’ despite it being underfunded)

    • @krashd
      @krashd Před 4 lety +4

      @@jess4709 We are capitalist socialist, we were fully socialist after world war 2 when everything got nationalised under labour but the Tories have gradually privatised everything and those privatised industries have moved abroad. British Leyland Motorcars, British Rail, British Steel, British Aerospace, British Petroleum, etc, all got sold off and eventually moved elsewhere. That's what happens when you sell something, the new owner can switch it off and take it with them.

  • @slimblu1
    @slimblu1 Před 3 lety +45

    The U.K has many issues to address but I'm so grateful for our N.H.S.. I can only imagine the trauma of having a loved one needing vital, emergency medical treatment and being asked for their insurance policy before they are treated.

  • @Kosiahswag1
    @Kosiahswag1 Před 3 lety +26

    I used to live in Belgium. We had to pay for medical insurance but it was very inexpensive only about €100 per year. The healthcare was brilliant and definitely worth it.

    • @roops2939
      @roops2939 Před 11 měsíci

      This won't work in the UK. The people are not open for new ideas and new systems.
      Look at the crumbling UK infrastructure, transport , health service, education system etc all dismal failures

  • @autumntriesthings
    @autumntriesthings Před 3 lety +2580

    It baffles me that America thinks fighting for basic human rights is a “radical” “far left” idea 😩

    • @paulie3748
      @paulie3748 Před 3 lety +186

      And it's meant to be the land of the free 😂😂

    • @davidbrayshaw6162
      @davidbrayshaw6162 Před 3 lety +134

      I’m British - we do find our health services! We pay for it as part of our taxes! We are not a socialist country, but we British believe that tax is not a bad thing as long as it is spent on things that are beneficial for us! In America tax is a dirty word and generally Americans believe in lowest lower bottom tax levels as possible! We do not see it as socialist! We are not a socialist nation but we see fairness very very differently to America! We see the American system as broken too expensive and discriminatory (not on colour or religion but financial!). I have see this report and you have missed one huge point! The people of Britain would not stand for the loss of the NHS it is central to our culture and it all parties know this! The NHS is not for sale! EVER! But I agree with you Aki Fujikawa! But the bottom line is TAX! And how taxes are spent or how much they are!

    • @David_Khu
      @David_Khu Před 3 lety +22

      @Crispy Bud where did you get that nonsense from?? 😄😄 "Daily Mail", I guess...
      It costs symbolic amount of money, just to avoid people going there for almost no reason... also yang and older people are exempt from those fees

    • @darkmusky9851
      @darkmusky9851 Před 3 lety +19

      They been watching too much Fox news

    • @irrelevance3859
      @irrelevance3859 Před 3 lety +33

      Americans are terrified of tax for whatever reason which is beyond me because the sole purpose is to benefit the PEOPLE. On top of that it's cheaper than insurance because *everyone* is contributing, it's more expensive to build up insurance that only you will be paying than for everyone to pay a small % that benefits everyone equally. People there are so terrified of tax for no reason.

  • @cheoart6308
    @cheoart6308 Před 4 lety +160

    My father had a double brain aneurism, he was in hospital for nearly a year recovering and is still going well after 20 years, FOR FREE! Bless the NHS.

    • @helenwood8482
      @helenwood8482 Před 4 lety +15

      My brother had severe diabetes and lost his job. In the US, the whole family would have had to sell everything they had and it would still have quickly run out. His treatments to delay blindness alone would have cost tens of thousands and he got it all free. He would have died a decade sooner if he had been in the US and my father would have ended up homeless and penniless.

    • @alastairp
      @alastairp Před 4 lety +2

      It's not for free, it's the government taking your money running it through a bureaucratic system and then turning around and expecting you to be happy with the result.
      That is unless you are a leech on the system who makes less than 30k.

    • @alastairp
      @alastairp Před 4 lety +1

      @Benji Winger The point that this system has been in place since I was born and no larger political party has put privatisation of it in their manifesto, so I am forced to continue paying more than if I was in a private system.

    • @disceva6443
      @disceva6443 Před 4 lety +6

      @@alastairp I think I've seen you in almost every comment chain on this video. If you don't mind me asking, do you live in the UK, and have you actually used the NHS?

    • @alastairp
      @alastairp Před 4 lety +2

      @@disceva6443 Yes, Yes

  • @gingazhawthorn2984
    @gingazhawthorn2984 Před 3 lety +10

    i live in UK - got diagnosed with breast cancer in August 2020. Had operation within 2 weeks of diagnosis, radiotherapy in the September and back at work beginning of November. Brilliant service, no long waiting times. Caring follow-up. NHS is the best. Anyone who knocks it is ignorant of the facts or lying.

  • @thomasscullion9449
    @thomasscullion9449 Před 3 lety +19

    As a Scotsman man growing up in the UK the NHS is our crown jewel. We all share the cost because we all care

    • @skellurip
      @skellurip Před rokem

      your crown jewel is secretly changed into american flavor health care insurance system

    • @thomasscullion9449
      @thomasscullion9449 Před rokem

      @@skellurip is it because i just got two operations within a twelfth week window that in the states would have cost me £160000 but hey Ho I just got the bill and it was, oh sorry I didn't get a bill so NHS ALL THE WAY

    • @skellurip
      @skellurip Před rokem

      @@thomasscullion9449 watch dirty war on the nhs. basically you can get way much better and faster healthcare on NHS than what you get right now

  • @StripyViper
    @StripyViper Před 4 lety +2832

    The NHS makes me proud to be British!

    • @anthony.m5432
      @anthony.m5432 Před 4 lety +23

      Same!!!

    • @rungeon83
      @rungeon83 Před 4 lety +39

      Makes me ashamed, I've sadly been let down by the NHS (which is not free considering the UK has some of the highest tax in the world). Had I known how terrible the NHS was, I would have just gone private earlier.

    • @sunseeker9581
      @sunseeker9581 Před 4 lety +91

      @BigWilki123321 everyone gets healthcare in the uk for half the price and 99% of the nation are also proud. And no taxes are not very high here. Scandenavia tax is high but you get a lot more for your money like free university and strong welfare.

    • @mark63424able
      @mark63424able Před 4 lety +53

      @BigWilki123321 No, its because we look at the US and see that the number one cause of bankruptcy is due to medical bills. We see they are paying more than twice as much as we do per person and yet have higher child mortality rates and lower life expectancy. All of this has been crystal clear to UK citizens since the NHS was founded after WWII- and has been made even clearer in this pandemic. Its why all political parties in the UK (both left and right wing) support the NHS. It guarantees healthcare for the vulnerable in society all while costing substantially less than the US system. There are fundamental ideological differences between the UK and USA that aren't always obvious but are underlined by our approaches to healthcare. I had surgery under the NHS that would have cost $200,000 had it been in the US, and I didn't have to pay a penny upfront, I know that I have and will pay back into the system through tax over the course of my lifetime. The UK praises its NHS like the US praises its military, its one of the few things that everyone in the UK stands behind and is one of the things that makes me proud to be British.

    • @kingstontown7362
      @kingstontown7362 Před 4 lety +1

      splonkernoodle same I'm from Shrewsbury in the West Midlands living in telford

  • @mahdimohammadi9944
    @mahdimohammadi9944 Před 4 lety +1349

    I’m from Austria. I wouldn’t call Bernie a “far left politician”. Here in Europe we would call him a center left or a social democrat.

    • @GuinessOriginal
      @GuinessOriginal Před 4 lety +60

      Mahdi Mohammadi I think he's about as left wing as Merkel. Their policies are probably pretty much aligned, in fact he might be too the right of her on some issues. And I don't remember anyone in Germany accusing her of being far left

    • @adamgriffin8197
      @adamgriffin8197 Před 4 lety +14

      Guinness yeah but in Europe even merkel isn’t considered far left. Although I would say she leans to the left I wouldn’t class it as extreme. But that’s just my view and I am an outsider to German politics so I may be wrong.

    • @damedusa5107
      @damedusa5107 Před 4 lety +32

      Adam Griffin yer I think she’s more to the right. But I’m the USA they would think she was a full blown communist.

    • @GuinessOriginal
      @GuinessOriginal Před 4 lety +8

      Adam Griffin no Merkel is to right of politics in Germany. Ask a German

    • @sumvs5992
      @sumvs5992 Před 4 lety +1

      I mean, he's agreed with many communist countries. Not far left though?

  • @oliplaysbass
    @oliplaysbass Před 3 lety +22

    Basically, Breaking Bad would have been a whole lot different if it was set in the UK

    • @danylo.s
      @danylo.s Před 3 lety +3

      It wouldn't have been.

    • @oliplaysbass
      @oliplaysbass Před 3 lety +1

      @@danylo.s care to elaborate?

    • @RealFemale69
      @RealFemale69 Před 2 lety

      @@danylo.s I mean Walt did it because he enjoyed the life but he wouldn't have got into it if he wasn't dying

  • @tommiddleton6590
    @tommiddleton6590 Před 3 lety +23

    I think the NHS is probably the only British service that I’d keep nationalised.

  • @richardmaddocks4243
    @richardmaddocks4243 Před 4 lety +759

    Let me explain this in a way someone from any country can understand.
    I have a job. I earn about $1500 a month.
    The British government takes about $100 a month from my salary.
    In return, any healthcare I might need is free.
    If I don't have a job, any healthcare I might need is still free, because all the other people who are paying a small amount of their salary to the government are helping to pay for the people who don't have a job.
    It works both ways and is very fair.

    • @angelantayhua3096
      @angelantayhua3096 Před 3 lety +117

      wHy SHouLd I pAY FOr sOmeONe elSE. THeY aRe leeCHeS

    • @TheWeepingDalek
      @TheWeepingDalek Před 3 lety +86

      @@angelantayhua3096 because it could happen to you one day. And on that day someone else will pay for you.

    • @ollaphobos8988
      @ollaphobos8988 Před 3 lety +89

      @@TheWeepingDalek I think he was joking

    • @arunsreenivasan2074
      @arunsreenivasan2074 Před 3 lety +70

      Koba He was being sarcastic. Also I’ve always wanted to do this r/whooooosh

    • @djlads
      @djlads Před 3 lety +36

      @Chelsea Exactly, what you're told by even the Democrats about what this will cost is a lie. Here's a full example of costs.
      In the UK nobody pays tax or National Insurance (NI) (NI is health and state pension) until they earn £9,500 per year ($11,885.35) once they hit above that they start paying NI at 12% until they earn above £50,000 ($62,554.50) then it drops to 2%.
      Once people earn over £12,500 per year ($15,638.63) you start paying Income Tax at 20% until they earn over £50,000 ($62,554.50) then it goes to 40%, then at £150,000 ($187,663.50) it goes to 45%.
      Employers have to pay towards all Employees National insurance at 13.8% based on that persons salary/wage once it goes above £9,500 ($11,885.35). Regardless of how high the salary is.
      23 million people in the UK pay no income tax, let's for example say they earn £12,000 ($15013.08) per year that means they only pay £332.16 ($415.56) per year their employer would pay £381.98 ($477.89) per year. In total that would be £16,425,220,000 or $20,549,428,489.80 towards the NHS and state pension.
      If you were earning £55,000 ($68,809.95) per year you'd pay £5,011.56 ($6269.91) whilst your employer would pay £6,019.28 ($7530.66)
      At £160,000 ($200,174.40) you pay £7,006.56 ($8765.84) per year and the employer pays £19,784.78 ($24,752.54)
      At £500,000 ($625,545.00) you pay £13,466.56 ($16,847.88) per year and your employer pays £64,358.78 ($80,518.63)
      Employers also have to pay it for any company car, phone, expenses or payout of contract, employees don't.
      This all goes out before your net pay, it doesn't cost people much, maybe those fighting against it are employers who do have to pay more.

  • @battmarn
    @battmarn Před 4 lety +445

    Here’s how it works
    UK: “I feel ill, I’ll go see a doctor in case it’s anything serious”
    US: “I feel ill. I hope it’s nothing serious because I can’t afford to go see a doctor”

    • @nick260682
      @nick260682 Před 4 lety +65

      Sam Doohan
      I think you’ve taken a basic imagined scenario and imposed the worst possible intentions, and in doing so completely missed the original point.

    • @LongdownConker
      @LongdownConker Před 4 lety +20

      @@lostalone9320 I'm guessing you have never heard of triage lol 😂

    • @paulching8795
      @paulching8795 Před 4 lety +7

      We first go to the chemist if there are some concerns. Then if it’s something more serious, we will see a GP, and if necessary, a specialist or allied health practitioner. If something really bad happens, we can go to the A&E and have things sorted. Or in the worst case scenarios, we can call 999 and get an ambulance to the A&E for treatment.

    • @LongdownConker
      @LongdownConker Před 4 lety +7

      @@paulching8795 or call 111 for minor ailments or advice

    • @xjadit7826
      @xjadit7826 Před 4 lety +8

      Sam Doohan your missing the point the point is we don’t have to worry about bankrupting our selves for a routine check up most of us brits wouldn’t go “just in case” but we could

  • @cammysmith7562
    @cammysmith7562 Před 3 lety +17

    As a conservative I think the NHS is the greatest thing to ever happen to this country. Healthcare is a right not a privilege and I will fight to defend healthcare for all people in the UK.

    • @jamesabestos2800
      @jamesabestos2800 Před 11 měsíci

      As long as you’re not dying or really sick then no

    • @FellaHAILIRA
      @FellaHAILIRA Před 10 měsíci

      Thank God we don't have free health care... 4 months wait for a 10 minute consultation with a doctor 😂. The NHS is the favourite tool of Brits to shame other countries and the best boasting tool... Lmao they comment on American and other rich countries health care systems. The NHS seems like a policy for the poor people, of the poor country, financed by poor citizens. 😂

    • @FellaHAILIRA
      @FellaHAILIRA Před 10 měsíci

      Yep, look up, by NHS rules a doctor isn't allowed to meet his/her patients for more than 10 minutes. Every appointment with a doctor takes a minimum of 13 weeks. It's all a scam. Oh, one more thing, if you have a diabetic l, blood pressure and heart problems. You are allowed to treat only one problem at a time. For the other two you'll have to wait again for 13 x 2 weeks.

  • @Identifyplumbing
    @Identifyplumbing Před 2 lety +8

    I’ve had three children all in the nhs including one that was Caesarean section birth. Cost zero. Excellent service and staffing. Every car crash or illness is covered for everyone. Regardless of how your career of general circumstances are. Everyone on the globe should have a similar system.

  • @_Ali.
    @_Ali. Před 4 lety +1044

    “Socialised medicine” because everyone pays for it? So, is it a “socialised police service” or do you pay every time you dial 911? How about when your house catches fire? Is that a pay per use service?

    • @anserbauer309
      @anserbauer309 Před 4 lety +259

      I think it's funny how Americans always want to apply their own loaded terminology and binary political standards to other countries whose political discourse and social awareness are so much more sophisticated and developed. It's like listening to a ten year old try to explain 'ethics' to a moral philosopher.

    • @grahvis
      @grahvis Před 4 lety +152

      @@anserbauer309 .
      I think it's because a large percentage of US citizens have absolutely no idea how things are so different in most other countries.
      America is virtually the only country in the world where workers have no legal entitlement to paid annual leave, yet few appear to realise what they are missing.
      They claim universal healthcare would mean raising taxes but again don't realise, they are already paying more for far less.

    • @feebeejeebees
      @feebeejeebees Před 4 lety +121

      Far too many Americans cannot differentiate between socialism and communism. As you point out, they already have socialised police, fire department, also education from kindergarten through high school. And what is the military, if not socialised defence ? So why not healthcare ? The answer is money. Too many big corporations are making billions from the system in its current format, and they are not going to give up without a big fight. So they talk down socialism as if it's evil like communism, when the reality is it's looking after your fellow American. What could be more patriotic than that ?

    • @AKAL-th6dl
      @AKAL-th6dl Před 3 lety +4

      grahvis Most don’t even have retirement plans and no pensions

    • @ikay87
      @ikay87 Před 3 lety +11

      The ignorance is mind boggling!

  • @Sarcastix7
    @Sarcastix7 Před 4 lety +564

    "Thatcher centre for freedom"
    They may as well carry around a neon sign saying we're an American insurance funded lobbying group

    • @josephdugdale4150
      @josephdugdale4150 Před 4 lety +46

      You're are not wrong! Corporate shills like that melt are ruining this country

    • @MintlyGood
      @MintlyGood Před 4 lety +28

      Named after a witch as well

    • @williamatkinson3448
      @williamatkinson3448 Před 4 lety +9

      I was thinking the same thing aswell

    • @Isomoar
      @Isomoar Před 4 lety +5

      Sounds like George Orwell made their name up!

    • @troytt777
      @troytt777 Před 4 lety

      🤣🤣

  • @absentrocket8619
    @absentrocket8619 Před 3 lety +20

    As a brit this makes me appreciate the NHS more

  • @LivvyHackett
    @LivvyHackett Před 3 lety +6

    If I’m correct, in the Uk, if you are 18+, you pay about $10 for *any* prescription, no matter if the raw cost of the drug is £1 or £100, it’s amazing for people with chronic expensive medical problems

    • @thebestspork
      @thebestspork Před 3 lety +1

      Couple of small corrections: prescriptions are free in Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland. In England, they are about £10 per item, however if you need regular prescriptions you can pay a flat fee (£30 for 3 months or £110 for an entire year) which will cover the cost of all prescriptions during that period.

    • @phoenix-xu9xj
      @phoenix-xu9xj Před 7 měsíci

      You pay nothing if it’s a life-saving drug. Like insulin. Inhalers. Etc

    • @RedBrigades
      @RedBrigades Před 2 měsíci

      Yes. Only for those in work earning a certain ammount have to pay.
      But if you are on different meds, picking up your monthly perscription for 5 different meds...5 lots (blood pressure meds, anti-depresents, diabeties meds, epilepsy meds, anti-biotic, pain killers, sleepers 🤤😂 opiods, creams, vitamins and everyrhing you can think of. of 30 days medication....it is still £10. One item or 10. Still a flat rate of £10.
      But most people will go because of a painful water infection that won't shift for example. Do your samples, get your meds amd away you go.
      Be riots (forever) if they tried to sell it off.

  • @levlynds1902
    @levlynds1902 Před 4 lety +1018

    It's pretty bad that Americans need to have a video to show how healthcare should be managed in a developed country.

    • @egge6145
      @egge6145 Před 4 lety +35

      that would imply they took in the information

    • @colinward1007
      @colinward1007 Před 4 lety +52

      @@egge6145 maybe the producer should have put the odd image of a gun in the video to keep them interested.

    • @BritishFreedom
      @BritishFreedom Před 4 lety +4

      You should have a read of this. www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-england-stoke-staffordshire-50836324 The media has an agenda, selling the benefits of the NHS, but it's not all that rosey. There's pros ann cons.

    • @user-oj8pg6ef4c
      @user-oj8pg6ef4c Před 4 lety +10

      BritishFreedom so u gave an example of one horribly managed hospital out of all in the U.K.👏

    • @djlads
      @djlads Před 3 lety +11

      @@BritishFreedom Yet another non British person spreading propaganda about how bad the NHS is by use 1 example.
      www.bbc.co.uk/news/health-40608253 here's one from a US Think Tank that put UK 1st and America last out of 11 countries.
      worldpopulationreview.com/country-rankings/best-healthcare-in-the-world here's another, ok the UK is 18th here, but the US is 37th behind Costa Rica and just above Slovenia!

  • @escfxp
    @escfxp Před 4 lety +252

    The UK NHS must be protected at all costs - it's one of things that makes the UK special.

    • @rytisbaranauskas6209
      @rytisbaranauskas6209 Před 4 lety

      Or mabye have a referendum on NHSexit?;D

    • @danielb7006
      @danielb7006 Před 4 lety

      @@rytisbaranauskas6209 That would likely fail spectacularly.
      Source: yougov.co.uk/topics/politics/articles-reports/2018/07/04/nhs-british-institution-brits-are-second-most-prou

    • @Staann
      @Staann Před 4 lety +1

      It is quite common in western countries (except the us)

    • @Ace01234k
      @Ace01234k Před rokem

      It won’t last forever

    • @skellurip
      @skellurip Před rokem

      how, did you know that they secretly destroy the nhs and replace it with more americanized version of healthcare

  • @borisdefeffel1665
    @borisdefeffel1665 Před 3 lety +14

    Just to sum up its success. Ive lived in the UK all my life and ive never met a British human who wants to get rid of the NHS. Its like a child, it drives everyone crazy but is loved so dearly

    • @jazzx251
      @jazzx251 Před 3 lety +2

      There are definitely things that could be improved - but you vote Conservative, and what do you expect?
      The system is terrific, but it needs better funding - I would pay an extra 5% tax to improve it (as long as that tax increase was ring-fenced solely for the NHS).

    • @skellurip
      @skellurip Před rokem

      watch the dirty war against nhs, and you will see how they secretly want to get rid of the nhs and now slowly change it into more americanized version of healthcare

  • @rajjgaming5919
    @rajjgaming5919 Před 3 lety +13

    Back when I was 10 I went to the NHS and they treated me very kindly.

  • @bigdundee12345
    @bigdundee12345 Před 4 lety +169

    Even if i never need the nhs and pay into it my whole life through tax, I’m still happy in the knowledge that the money is well spent and goes towards helping my fellow countrymen. If i were paying for health insurance, that money is going to a greedy insurance company that will increase my rates as i get older, not cool!

    • @corsacs3879
      @corsacs3879 Před 4 lety +15

      Big dundee that’s the biggest problem with Americans, they don’t care for everyone else’s welfare. I’m happy to pay into the NHS because it’s an amazing cause, and if I ever need it - it’s there. I’d hate to live in a county knowing that nobody cares about you or anyone.

    • @lizlemonwantsitall
      @lizlemonwantsitall Před 4 lety +2

      Everyone will eventually the nhs, old age does not come without health changes!

    • @rowanmaguire7890
      @rowanmaguire7890 Před 4 lety +1

      @Laurence Cursaro investing in the well fear of other peoples health

    • @monzorella1
      @monzorella1 Před 4 lety

      Facts

    • @rowanmaguire7890
      @rowanmaguire7890 Před 4 lety

      @Laurence Cursaro well to start people don't go bust when they get injured or ill

  • @manzilla48
    @manzilla48 Před 4 lety +1420

    I’d rather have access to free health care than access to guns...

    • @welshgit
      @welshgit Před 4 lety +173

      There was an American ranting on youtube a while back, saying that gun ownership is a fundamental natural human right, but healthcare is a privilege...

    • @Eliteerin
      @Eliteerin Před 4 lety +102

      @@welshgit what a nutter 😂

    • @tommygunner321
      @tommygunner321 Před 4 lety +73

      I love America, I respect most Americans for their proud patriotic view on their country, in fact I envy them I think it’s brilliant. But the one thing I hate about the US and Americans in general is their blind stupidity towards guns. Most argue that you need guns to protect yourself, but the only reason they need to protect themselves in the first place is because people have guns...??. Here in the UK I think it’s 10-50 people die every year from guns (or a similar number). I understand that most Americans are proud of the ‘Right to bear arms’, but the US would be so much safer and better to live in without.

    • @slooser
      @slooser Před 4 lety +18

      tommygunner321 we get more than 10 deaths a year. I’d say between 60-150, but it’s still insultingly low compared to the USA

    • @tommygunner321
      @tommygunner321 Před 4 lety +11

      Fiddly Polo-English dude Slusarczyk There’s no way we get ‘60-150’ that number is preposterous. I can’t remember the last time I read about a shooting or heard about one in the news, I’d say 10-25 per year at tops, people just don’t get shot in the UK and dying from being shot? Very rare. Usually when they do it’s in an area like Greater London or Manchester but even then most crimes are with blades/blunt weapons.

  • @Mlo-tn9yr
    @Mlo-tn9yr Před 3 lety +57

    America a developed country, love a good joke in a serious topic.

    • @pradeep128
      @pradeep128 Před 3 lety

      Well no other “developed country” created CZcams, where you are typing this message. So STFU.

    • @Mlo-tn9yr
      @Mlo-tn9yr Před 3 lety +5

      @@pradeep128 you ever heard of a joke?

    • @skuyzy198
      @skuyzy198 Před 3 lety +1

      @@pradeep128 USA didn't created youtube either. It was couple of guys, who might've been in any european country too.

    • @pradeep128
      @pradeep128 Před 3 lety

      @@skuyzy198 well, that wasn’t the case. Europeans love to tout their inventions, so why can’t Americans do the same?

    • @Mlo-tn9yr
      @Mlo-tn9yr Před 3 lety +1

      @@pradeep128 @skuyzy go fight somewhere else.

  • @tall1sobay
    @tall1sobay Před 3 lety +6

    As an American Expat living in London, I am PROUD of the NHS! I can't even imagine going back to the US system. When I needed to have a heart valve repaired, still living in California, even with very good insurance. I still paid $4000 for the procedure. Here it would have all just been done and thats that. My medications are cheap for what I need. And unlike some insurance in the States, I don't need to add additional prescription drug coverage or worry if the drug I need will be covered.

  • @Lglover3
    @Lglover3 Před 4 lety +383

    Maybe you’ll see how important a national health service after this pandemic. One thing for certain is that the NHS will be going nowhere after this

    • @isthisjustfantasy7557
      @isthisjustfantasy7557 Před 4 lety +39

      👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻 god help any politician who tries to ruin our NHS.

    • @Lglover3
      @Lglover3 Před 4 lety +7

      Isthisjustfantasy 75 trump might give it a go right after Boris botches brexit

    • @scotsbillhicks
      @scotsbillhicks Před 4 lety +1

      Bean
      Hmmm...yeah, a possible scenario, the Brexit end game turned out different from what we promised, (but that’s not our fault), so...we need to get the money from somewhere...

    • @lucykinski
      @lucykinski Před 4 lety +12

      I really hope the nhs gets the support it needs after this

    • @emilygilbeyful
      @emilygilbeyful Před 4 lety +10

      Even Boris has had his eyes well and truly opened to how amazing the NHS is!!!

  • @flyingbanana566
    @flyingbanana566 Před 3 lety +23

    UK citizen: “we don’t pay anything upfront for healthcare.”
    US citizen: “I’m almost bankrupt from my medical bills but I have freedom.”
    UK citizen: (speechless)

    • @Ed.E
      @Ed.E Před 3 lety +5

      And that American person forgets that we have the freedom to go private if we want

    • @davidevans916
      @davidevans916 Před 3 lety +5

      And they have guns, which is clearly more important 🙄😂

    • @tobiah4972
      @tobiah4972 Před 3 lety

      @@davidevans916 Which have proven to get police to not harass protesters while armed individuals marched alongside them, so yeah, they kinda are.🙄

  • @olivia6496
    @olivia6496 Před 3 lety +4

    I endured a horrific injury 3 years ago. I spent the first couple of years in and out of surgery and CT scans and MRI’s, then months and months in rehabilitation and physio therapy learning how to use my legs again. Let’s just say I thank the NHS every single day for their SUBLIME service. I don’t know what financial position my family would be in if I were born in America. I think a debt of around $300,000. But here living in the UK, I’ve had to pay nothing.

  • @littlemisskittyuk1
    @littlemisskittyuk1 Před 4 lety +174

    The NHS makes me proud to be British. I can’t imagine having to go to hospital for treatment and having a bill, or having to worry if I can afford to have treatment. We LOVE our NHS.

    • @sinneryy8662
      @sinneryy8662 Před 4 lety +3

      @Laurence Cursaro Why would it? Its supporting people who need serious care through hospitals, and treating people who might have smaller diseases through Surgeries (Not like an actual surgery, basically where you can get checked up on by GP) and even if you dont get sick you arent overpaying, youre paying for people who may need the help and helping pay the NHS Staff, We pay significantly less than the US through healthcare, and we get alot more healthcare than them, despite it being not as accesible over there

    • @shelleyphilcox4743
      @shelleyphilcox4743 Před 4 lety +4

      @Laurence Cursaro No it doesnt. It needs 2% more GDP spent, training of more doctors and nurses and a commitment from them to give a minimum time period to the NHS before going private.

    • @user-eh1gc7xo7q
      @user-eh1gc7xo7q Před 4 lety +8

      Sinneryy Just ignore him, he’s commenting on nearly every other comment saying Sinclair things. Just a sad tit looking for attention

    • @sd-fz3wn
      @sd-fz3wn Před 4 lety +1

      @Laurence Cursaro I'm healthy, so everyone else must be.

    • @firehazzard8497
      @firehazzard8497 Před 3 lety

      @Laurence Cursaro Uh actually its broken because the same people that are in power keep defunding it until it doesn't work anymore so then we privatise. Staff have constantly been underpaid and keep losing money, as they work overtime for staff shortages. How are they lazy? They are dying for us to live during this pandemic, working 12-14 hour shifts everyday with a few hours sleep, sleeping at the hospital just to make sure they can save as many as possible.

  • @max.1030
    @max.1030 Před 4 lety +79

    As a Brit I think I speak for us all when I say I love the NHS

  • @slimlegs6298
    @slimlegs6298 Před 3 lety +119

    The fact that Bernie Sanders is considered ‘far-left’ is depressing

    • @MarineAqua45
      @MarineAqua45 Před 3 lety +6

      In Britain,he’d be centre-left.

    • @Name-iq8te
      @Name-iq8te Před 3 lety

      @@MarineAqua45 he'd be right of centre

    • @FaBB10_FS24
      @FaBB10_FS24 Před 3 lety

      @@Name-iq8te There is nothing right about his views and opinions.

    • @shrek19yearsago78
      @shrek19yearsago78 Před 2 lety +1

      Joe Biden is considered a conservative in some developed countries

    • @FaBB10_FS24
      @FaBB10_FS24 Před 2 lety

      @@shrek19yearsago78 No he isnt.

  • @xammendoza667
    @xammendoza667 Před 3 lety +4

    NHS helped me a lot. I'm diabetic and have high blood pressure. All my meds are free because of my diabetes. There's a free retinopathy screening every year. Seeing a GP once a month to check my blood sugar and blood pressure is also free. Also every 6 months, having blood tests is free as well.
    If I live in the US, I'd be living in the streets or having a meter high medical bills every month and would be in severe stress and in a state of depression.
    Speaking of depression, I have it too. Free meds and free mental health therapy twice a month for six months. All free...
    Thank you NHS, and to my wifey...
    She's been a true gem. An ITU nurse who helped COVID patients recover.
    Stay safe everybody.

  • @anthonyl.goraczko6099
    @anthonyl.goraczko6099 Před 4 lety +728

    Not only the UK , but most of Europe has this system , and 99% of the people like it .

    • @flynnparish9833
      @flynnparish9833 Před 4 lety +7

      @Arthur Clements socialists don't like math.

    • @anthonyl.goraczko6099
      @anthonyl.goraczko6099 Před 4 lety +34

      @Arthur Clements Well GENIUS , I just mean the majority .

    • @nottsoserious
      @nottsoserious Před 4 lety +14

      @@anthonyl.goraczko6099 Why don't we think about it this way? A majority of people in most of Europe's legislatures is all that is needed to pass a law.
      In the US, on the other hand, you need a majority of the house and 60% of senators?!
      Also the president can veto the law, and if he does you need 66% of the entire Congress to overturn it!?
      Even if a majority of a people like an idea, the minority can make it null. God bless America.

    • @paullangley6280
      @paullangley6280 Před 4 lety +23

      Pretty much every wealthy nation in the world has socialized medical care. Is it perfect, no it isn’t. Will you get a quick knee transplant in the UK...No. Will you get generally excellent care if you have cancer...Yes. Also certainly in most of the European countries you can supplement your care with private health insurance, often paid by employers. Given that the USA spends in the region of 18% of GDP on healthcare and Uk, France, Germany spend 10-12% of GDP there is clearly something significantly wrong with the US system, given that healthcare outcomes are generally better in Europe. Surely it’s wrong that the wealthiest country in the world (total GDP, not per capita) should see the largest cause of personal bankruptcies to be healthcare expenses? This is of course before we even think about the impact of health insurance on workforce mobility.

    • @RonaldHapchwarae
      @RonaldHapchwarae Před 4 lety +3

      Most of Europe doesn't have this system. The only other place in Europe with it is Gibraltar, a British territory.
      Europe uses a insurance model not a nationalised model. Both provide universal free at the point of the delivery health care though

  • @Wrinklemina
    @Wrinklemina Před 4 lety +361

    He said about NHS staff not being trained adequately for operations such as cataracts because they all go to private, THIS IS NOT TRUE. I am an Ophthalmics scrub nurse and I have worked for years in 2 NHS trusts. I have assisted in thousands of cataract surgeries and everyone I work with is very well trained in them. Yes, the NHS provide contracts for cataracts for private hospitals but that does not take away the massive numbers of surgeries we carry out EACH day! I have worked in private and a lot of the doctors and nurses who work there are not full time members of staff and are working on a bank shift basis. If anything, the nurses are less experienced in private healthcare as they don’t just do Ophthalmic procedures, they do a wide range of surgical specialities.

    • @jamesatkins7592
      @jamesatkins7592 Před 4 lety +4

      I thought he said just that - that the folks that go and work in private health gain less experience for that area

    • @ShawFujikawa
      @ShawFujikawa Před 3 lety +16

      I imagine they might have been scraping a little bit looking for things to criticise about the NHS, to appear fairer. :P

    • @alundavies8402
      @alundavies8402 Před 3 lety +3

      We are lucky here in England because we have a welfare state and a democratic monarchy a constitutional monarchy

    • @mentaldavethefirst
      @mentaldavethefirst Před 3 lety +5

      He wasn't saying there are no experienced people. He said the more the NHS utilises the private sector the harder it becomes to get experienced staff as they don't get to do the operation in the NHS as frequently.

    • @Ryan-zb3uz
      @Ryan-zb3uz Před 3 lety +5

      Not to mention private companies take less risky patients so are likely to be less trained when it comes to dangerous ones I suppose

  • @bluesky1807
    @bluesky1807 Před 3 lety +15

    The NHS is an everyday miracle and am so proud to work for it.

  • @olivercoel7765
    @olivercoel7765 Před 3 lety +9

    I love the NHS. Every single nurse ive ever been with has been the kindest person ever. its amazing

    • @noahdoris6923
      @noahdoris6923 Před 3 lety

      It's so amazing when one finally finds joy in achieving something that’s so important to human, which is a sound good health, bcs there’s nothing more beautiful than having a good health been free from disease and infections. I don’t even know what else to say or rather how to express my joy, but it must! Be voiced out for thy Lord God Almighty is worthy to be praised 🙏🙌. I never knew or believed I would be cured from my hsv2. It a miracle and a thing of joy, just 11 days of me following some real and fast effective protocols I was able to eradicate my long term genital herpes. I can boldly say that I’m now herpes negative. I’m cured from my HSV2. I’m so excited 💃💃💃. I’m willing to help anyone who’s out there still suffering from the herpes virus. If you need my assistance on how to get rid of your herpes virus just the way I got rid of mine within a week and 4 days, just email me at Dragbonifoherbs@gmail.com and you will be completely healed just as i am today..,...................

    • @glynnwright1699
      @glynnwright1699 Před 3 lety

      American medical staff are just as kind, want to help their patients just like people in the UK, but they are obliged to work within the constraints imposed on them. I know a few, they are good people who care, but they can't change the US system.

  • @paulsweeney70
    @paulsweeney70 Před 4 lety +337

    The NHS isn't Socialist, it's just common sense.

    • @alastairp
      @alastairp Před 4 lety +2

      In China having an authoritarian state is common sense for those citizens.

    • @paulsweeney70
      @paulsweeney70 Před 4 lety +17

      @@alastairp Ah yes, I see what you think you did there.

    • @alastairp
      @alastairp Před 4 lety

      @@paulsweeney70 ??? Just because the overton window in a given country contains a given idea doesn't mean it's good.

    • @LongdownConker
      @LongdownConker Před 4 lety +24

      @@alastairp so no one dying because they can't afford the healthcare isn't a good thing?!

    • @alastairp
      @alastairp Před 4 lety

      @@LongdownConker So no people dying because of worse quality care and waits isn't a good thing?!

  • @datawasatreacherousandroid6509

    Bernie is ”far left” over there? Oh, Americans are so adorable.

    • @fkatwigsisthequeenofenglan4748
      @fkatwigsisthequeenofenglan4748 Před 4 lety +112

      his ideas are based around basic human rights and for some reason ppl still don't want to vote for that? I mean the UK didn't either I just need to stop being surprised people just need to actually start realising who is actually going to make a positive difference and that ain't Biden or trump and what is happening now is a perfect example of that...

    • @fkatwigsisthequeenofenglan4748
      @fkatwigsisthequeenofenglan4748 Před 4 lety +5

      if they cannot see that then more innocent people are going to die

    • @kingofracism
      @kingofracism Před 4 lety +12

      Its boomers mostly. They would be warmer to national socialism, but overall they prefer capitalism. Usually to their own detriment.

    • @mothermovementa
      @mothermovementa Před 4 lety +6

      Init.

    • @stephanweinberger
      @stephanweinberger Před 4 lety +89

      @Don Ghiata Bernie is just a social democrat. Over here in Europe he would be considered barely center-left. From an outside perspective the US doesn't even have a real "left" party. The Dems are moderate-right and the Reps right to far right by international standards.

  • @masterthieves
    @masterthieves Před 3 lety +13

    Everyone is covered in the NHS even you're not a citizen or homeless. It's a beautiful invention.

    • @Ace01234k
      @Ace01234k Před rokem

      No a citizen you shouldn’t get it

    • @charlesunderwood6334
      @charlesunderwood6334 Před rokem

      @@Ace01234k In theory, yes, but in reality it is more expensive to have systems in place (with all the extra staff costs) to invoice visitors than not. So most of the time guests to the UK are free.

  • @MooreMoDz
    @MooreMoDz Před 3 lety +20

    UK: Health Care
    USA: H(EA)alth Care

  • @elirohg4040
    @elirohg4040 Před 4 lety +682

    I still can't understand why Americans don't promote public healthcare. To be a developed country with such a lousy healthcare system where the citizens have to worry about cost is to me mind boggling.

    • @CamAlert2
      @CamAlert2 Před 4 lety +19

      personally i'm fine with public healthcare if it only covers certain things, like checkups, prescription drugs and first-aid.

    • @Pedro-tm6ue
      @Pedro-tm6ue Před 4 lety +70

      I suppose the issue is the American right's problems with a public system. Anything would be called "socialist" or "communist" in that context, even if it really isn't xb

    • @DripDripDrip69
      @DripDripDrip69 Před 4 lety +85

      The red scare has really done a lot of harm to this country.

    • @BoeJlden
      @BoeJlden Před 4 lety +26

      Our healthcare isn’t lousy. It is the best in the world in terms of quality of care. The problem is cost.

    • @Pedro-tm6ue
      @Pedro-tm6ue Před 4 lety +101

      @@BoeJlden sure the quality of care is great in the US but what is its worth if people can't access it or if it doesn't translate well into the markers of a healthy society, like life expectancy or infant mortality rate?

  • @glassstooth
    @glassstooth Před 4 lety +53

    I’m from the UK and have used the nhs many times over my life. This is the first time I’ve heard it called “socialist” to be honest. It’s a privilege for sure. But also a right.

  • @j0nnyism
    @j0nnyism Před 3 lety +9

    I have barely used the nhs in my 46 years. But it’s comforting to know that if I do become ill I won’t be worrying about crazy medical bills. Healthcare is not something that should be optional

  • @jasonbeattie4362
    @jasonbeattie4362 Před 3 lety +9

    The US has socialised education, socialised army, socialised navy, socialised airforce, socialised police, socialised fire service so what’s the problem with socialised health care

    • @procrastinatingotaku
      @procrastinatingotaku Před 3 lety

      Our education isn't socialized, or else I wouldn't have to pay $15,000 for instate tuition.

    • @jasonbeattie4362
      @jasonbeattie4362 Před 3 lety +1

      @@procrastinatingotaku I was referring to the US school system where it is provided free by the government but if you want to pay to go private you can. That is like the UKs health service

    • @nomad1944k
      @nomad1944k Před 3 lety

      ONE BIG PROBLEM REPUBLICANS.

  • @esclad
    @esclad Před 4 lety +564

    It's not socialist, it's common sense.
    We all pay into the pot - and we can all use it for free when needed.

    • @asahdo
      @asahdo Před 4 lety +45

      ESClad that’s pretty much the definition of socialism though: from each according to their means, to each according to their need. The problem is the word “socialism” has been stigmatised and demonised when really a lot of it is common sense, particularly when applied to things like health care

    • @esclad
      @esclad Před 4 lety +22

      @@asahdo Socialism stamps-out the will to achieve more and better oneself, it's a system that wants everyone the exact same, no better no worse. The NHS is constantly bettering itself so it is different and not socialist.

    • @asahdo
      @asahdo Před 4 lety +42

      @@esclad I think you are confusing socialism with communism. It is not an inherent part of socialism to stamp-out the will to achieve more or better oneself nor does it necessarily want everyone the exact same. There are different forms of socialism but the general definition is that the public own the means of production. The NHS is owned by the British people, we all pay towards it from our taxes based on what we can afford to give and we all receive from it based on what we need. That is socialist.

    • @alastairp
      @alastairp Před 4 lety +3

      Except for the people who don't pay taxes who get to use it, and the people who are forced by threat of prison to pay more than they ever use.

    • @robertyianni3623
      @robertyianni3623 Před 4 lety +5

      Amelia Oxborrow if that’s socialist what’s wrong with it ?

  • @dingus4077
    @dingus4077 Před 4 lety +401

    It’s insane to me that labelling something as “socialist” automatically makes it impossible to pass in the US . The UK is more of a centre right country atm but literally not s single MP in parliament would ever say get rid of the NHS. When will Americans get some sense and realise you don’t have to be 100% left or right wing. Take the best of both worlds for the best results ....so simple

    • @ethandavies214
      @ethandavies214 Před 4 lety +16

      Julian Hoyle I do agree but the conservatives have been trying to sell the nhs for decades all the while it was invented by a Labour Party working class member

    • @dingus4077
      @dingus4077 Před 4 lety +29

      Ethan Davies that is just such an American media myth !!! In the UK (where I’m from) the NHS is sacred to the point where if you oppose nhs in anyway the British public will end their political career! Boris Johnson yes there were rumours but there’s no way in hell it would have even been used in negotiations for UK US trade deal

    • @andrew300169
      @andrew300169 Před 4 lety +5

      Julian Hoyle It’s not necessarily the front line that Johnson will sell off its agreements on drug pricing, private access, the edges that the public doesn’t see

    • @adamarycurtis7016
      @adamarycurtis7016 Před 4 lety +1

      Brainwashing at its best

    • @andyhemsted4570
      @andyhemsted4570 Před 4 lety +4

      Ethan Davies k up Sir Henry Willink, the Conservative Minister for Health during WW2 who wrote and published a White Paper on the creation of.... The NHS!

  • @laurah7337
    @laurah7337 Před 3 lety +22

    Wow, this is fascinating to watch as a Brit. It's true, the nhs is absolutely a national treasure, and it breaks my heart to watch it deteriorate. Hopefully the pandemic's made people realise it's significance. Honestly not many countries can boast of having such a sophisticated system.

  • @yellowbuggaming7429
    @yellowbuggaming7429 Před 3 lety +3

    About 3 years ago I was admitted to hospital with kidney stones and a severe gall bladder infection which required surgery. Didn’t cost me a penny, and at no point was I ever worried about bills or being made homeless due to medical costs. Thank you NHS

  • @catalinacurio
    @catalinacurio Před 4 lety +364

    I can walk into any hospital A&E at any time and be treated with no worries about funding any treatment I need, for example stitches if I cut my finger...

    • @OlafoWaffle
      @OlafoWaffle Před 4 lety +4

      Question are their urgent care clinics that you can go to as well? They sorta fall in between visiting your GP or going to he ER (A&E), they handle cases that aren't serious enough to go to the ER, but needs to looked at sooner than getting into seeing your GP.

    • @kouroshtashvishi5031
      @kouroshtashvishi5031 Před 4 lety +24

      Yet another reason why our country it better

    • @felixnkrumah3560
      @felixnkrumah3560 Před 4 lety +13

      @@kouroshtashvishi5031 saying stuff like that, creates conflict. There's advantages and disadvantages with every country.

    • @BradThePitts
      @BradThePitts Před 4 lety

      Do you live in a litigious country?

    • @sadmancho
      @sadmancho Před 4 lety +23

      I needed stitches here in the U.S. and had to pay $2,670 for it.

  • @paulgilson2347
    @paulgilson2347 Před 4 lety +897

    Sod living in america, sounds awful.

    • @MyName-cw4yr
      @MyName-cw4yr Před 4 lety +6

      It's great, say what I like without the fear that the police could come crashing through my door at any second for saying mean words (one guy in Scotland was fined £850 for telling a joke on youtube) that sounds like tyranny to me.

    • @fanfeck2844
      @fanfeck2844 Před 4 lety +13

      My Name , I must admit, we have lost a lot of freedom of speech

    • @lizziegoodall7044
      @lizziegoodall7044 Před 4 lety +64

      My Name I’m guessing you’re white then lmao

    • @oc911
      @oc911 Před 4 lety +71

      @@MyName-cw4yr Stop chatting bollocks😂

    • @MsColl90
      @MsColl90 Před 4 lety +53

      Laurence Cursaro ridiculous - the video literally went through the metrics and the NHS is cheaper and better. But hey, don’t let facts stand I the way of your opinions.

  • @martinshillitoe4735
    @martinshillitoe4735 Před 3 lety +6

    I’m a Brit and last year was diagnosed with renal cancer after finding a large tumour. Within 4 weeks of discovery I had an operation to remove one of my kidneys. 2 ct scans, 2 nights stay in hospital, surgery to remove a kidney and the tumour, 3 doctor consultations and 28 days worth of blood thinning medication for post op recovery. Total cost to me £0.00. Time from detection to removal - 4 weeks!!! The NHs is amazing it astounds me that America can not provide the same level of care for its citizens

    • @airqx2808
      @airqx2808 Před 3 lety

      big up martin hope you're doing better

    • @peaveyst7
      @peaveyst7 Před 3 lety

      hi dude. a german here. had a tumor 7 years ago. one day after it was discovered, it was out of my head. it was growing in my earcanal. i also paid nothing. hope you doin good. cancer sux...

  • @cliffburridge
    @cliffburridge Před 3 lety +3

    15 years ago, I had chemo followed by a stem cell transplant. I was diagnosed by the NHS and treated start to finish. I had the best care available and came through clean as a whistle. Because I’d paid into the system over the years, I claimed it back by living. Didn’t have to sell my house, didn’t have to worry about my treatment. What’s not to like? Three years of treatment sorted as you go...

  • @joemcguinness2607
    @joemcguinness2607 Před 4 lety +81

    I couldn’t imagine living in a country where I’d have to worry about being ill because it might bankrupt me. The US is so far behind

    • @spencerwilton5831
      @spencerwilton5831 Před 4 lety +5

      Laurence Cursaro What if someone looses their job and therefore insurance coverage? US unemployment has hit 30 million this week- that's a lot of people with potentially no insurance! Are they lazy because they lost their jobs due to the lockdown?

    • @themasqueradingcow91
      @themasqueradingcow91 Před 4 lety +2

      @@spencerwilton5831 Well obviously they should pull them selves up by their bootstraps! /s
      It's a farce. Both my parents have had surgery that didn't bankrupt them. My mother had cancer and their focus was on making sure that their young kids understood what was going on, not worrying about gofundme or going bankrupt because of it.
      Being self employed, mum's insurance probably would have become un-affordable after her diagnosis and checkups extremely costly.
      I had a check up for a funky mole 'just in case', no upfront cost. Quick referral to hospital and peace of mind.

    • @grahvis
      @grahvis Před 4 lety +4

      @Laurence Cursaro .
      I don't think you understand the concept of insurance.

    • @Julmaa87
      @Julmaa87 Před 4 lety

      @Laurence Cursaro You've been in this video's comment section spouting crap all over it. Please go get an education.

  • @femme434
    @femme434 Před 4 lety +124

    The NHS is the Pride of the UK esp during this pandemic time 💙

    • @isthisjustfantasy7557
      @isthisjustfantasy7557 Před 4 lety +3

      👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻 heroes 💙

    • @sumvs5992
      @sumvs5992 Před 4 lety +1

      I'd rather eat than have free healthcare, praise to the actual heroes. Lorry drivers, farmers, cashiers, etc.

    • @AJ-cv9zf
      @AJ-cv9zf Před 4 lety

      @@sumvs5992 I agree with you but why cashiers?

  • @Bruh-yi8lg
    @Bruh-yi8lg Před 3 lety +29

    A big argument to this is that the uk has the “worse health care in Europe” but a counter argument would be “Still better than the US”

    • @Luca-bv5ic
      @Luca-bv5ic Před 3 lety +1

      *worst in North-western Europe

    • @Luca-bv5ic
      @Luca-bv5ic Před 3 lety

      @Ashish Agrawal what? Do you mean "even the worst is great"?

    • @andrewyoung749
      @andrewyoung749 Před 3 lety

      So why not argue for the USA to adopt French healthcare?
      Maybe because comrade sanders doesn't care about healthcare rather he just wants a massive a powerful state. Thus the lesser nhs is the model.

    • @daniellastuart3145
      @daniellastuart3145 Před 3 lety +1

      @@Luca-bv5ic that not true

    • @lochsidefishing5103
      @lochsidefishing5103 Před 3 lety +5

      I guarantee the UK NHS is better than the Serbian Healthcare. So "worst in Europe" is just completely false.

  • @bhavun8084
    @bhavun8084 Před 3 lety +8

    I’d rather be in uk where I am get an ambulance for free rather than have to die because I can’t afford one

  • @johnl.7754
    @johnl.7754 Před 4 lety +438

    With the virus outbreak I as an uninsured American am thinking should I go to the hospital or just try to deal with it myself since going to hospital might bankrupt me.

    • @premthapa9413
      @premthapa9413 Před 4 lety +14

      John L. Same here no insurance

    • @Andromediens
      @Andromediens Před 4 lety +29

      Welcome in America, if you take care of yourself then you'll have to pay. A LOT.

    • @victorsilva-oz7rm
      @victorsilva-oz7rm Před 4 lety +5

      Covid 19 is not a serious disease, nobody is going to bankrupt by coronavirus.

    • @eddiesulaiman
      @eddiesulaiman Před 4 lety +38

      @@victorsilva-oz7rm Apparently in the US, coronavirus might bankrupt you if you have no insurance. Just an IV drip will cost you 100$, that's might not include alcohol swap when they put the needle prior to the IV drip. The needles might also be charged separately. Currently, COVID-19 is dealt with by treating the symptoms. Feverish and dehydration means several 'IV therapy'. Just imagine a week in isolation ward (more expensive than a normal ward) with all the treatment of several symptoms.

    • @olestokke
      @olestokke Před 4 lety +6

      John L. And another side of the Story are people whom can not afford to stay home in self-quarantine, and infects others. Understandsbly people go to work when they don’t have much

  • @Bubblynoodlez
    @Bubblynoodlez Před 4 lety +158

    When it's easier to get a gun in the US then proper healthcare 😂

    • @paulg8730
      @paulg8730 Před 4 lety +12

      Tells you all you need to know doesn't it?

    • @assassindancer914
      @assassindancer914 Před 3 lety +8

      @@paulg8730 Murica be like:
      "but... muh rights, her emails!"

    • @whitebenrr9504
      @whitebenrr9504 Před 3 lety +2

      What? My healthcare cost less than a gun, i get top quality healthcare while spending less than you do on healthcare 😂

    • @whitebenrr9504
      @whitebenrr9504 Před 3 lety +3

      @Kish shiv i make $50k a year and spend 0 on healthcare because i have free insurance

    • @whitebenrr9504
      @whitebenrr9504 Před 3 lety +2

      @Kish shiv most peoples jobs come with insurance that covers everything

  • @rickkybobby8118
    @rickkybobby8118 Před 3 lety +6

    How does the UK health care system work? Better than the US one, and pretty bloody amazing when it's not being deliberately mis-managed by the Tories.

  • @nickyjlyons
    @nickyjlyons Před 3 lety +1

    As someone who has been hospitalised many times with asthma and countless visits to my doctor for various reasons, it infuriates me when people bad mouth the NHS. There is only one thing wrong, in my opinion, with the NHS and that's waiting times. If you need to see a specialist you'll be waiting months. But, it's free, it's FREE!!! I'm so proud of our NHS and will be forever thankful to each and every nurse, paramedic, doctor and surgeon for what they do. True superheroes

  • @abbiecolosimo3720
    @abbiecolosimo3720 Před 4 lety +164

    I’m from the 🇬🇧 and I don’t understand how theRichest country in the world is left so far behind in terms of all the healthcare systems et cetera

    • @Theo-bk6qj
      @Theo-bk6qj Před 4 lety +3

      One word, capitalist system. Just like Industrial Revolution in England but at least it not worse than the one in 18th century - about WW1

    • @abbiecolosimo3720
      @abbiecolosimo3720 Před 4 lety +1

      吴子轩 Scotland and wales are actually better than England we charge £9.15 for a prescription charge obviously not for people on long-term meds or contraception and optometry and dentistry is only free until you leave education or have a medical condition such as glucoma

    • @tedb3966
      @tedb3966 Před 4 lety +5

      I don’t think the UK has anything similar to Fox News. Fox News, and American conservatism in general, sees anything done in Europe or anywhere else but America as a socialist, tyrannical destroyer of freedom.

    • @abbiecolosimo3720
      @abbiecolosimo3720 Před 4 lety

      Crom are you from the USA if so are all the horror stories about people wear bands which say don’t call an ambulance true? And do you get refused treatment if you can’t pay?

    • @Theo-bk6qj
      @Theo-bk6qj Před 4 lety

      wil edge ok? How about capitalism? Is that better?

  • @shinlanten
    @shinlanten Před 4 lety +748

    *_"Far left Bernie Sanders"_*
    Europe: Seriously??

    • @coletrain5667
      @coletrain5667 Před 4 lety +31

      Americans don't care what europeans think, and for good reason. Europes historical track record is abysmal. The United States is the only country that never defaulted on its debt in the 20th century. Even the UK defaulted in its debt in 1932, although they try to deny it by blaming it on Germany or downplay it by stretching the definition of solvency.

    • @genrabbit9995
      @genrabbit9995 Před 4 lety +128

      Bernie is far left for US because they have moved far far far to the right.

    • @bubberlad
      @bubberlad Před 4 lety +70

      @@coletrain5667 haha typical ameritard, all you care about is money isnt it? no wonder bernie is "far left" for you :)

    • @paxundpeace9970
      @paxundpeace9970 Před 4 lety

      Really

    • @grantbeerling4396
      @grantbeerling4396 Před 4 lety +10

      @@coletrain5667 Really that is your point??? Tell, define what is a countries debt, especially now with both countries running fiat currencies....

  • @marcobranco526
    @marcobranco526 Před 3 lety +1

    I was hospitalised for 7 days in a London hospital for severe pneumonia. Transport was sent to my address to take me to the emergency at no cost. Nurses were amazing, i was well fed during my stay, a team of doctors regularly checked on me to make sure everything was ok. And when I was discharged, I was given a bag full with all of my medication. How much do you reckon I had to pay for everything? None, Zero, Nada, £0. We love our NHS, and won’t trade it for anything else. Yes, we all contribute through taxes, but honestly the monthly amount taxed from my pay-check is next to nothing.

    • @jazzx251
      @jazzx251 Před 3 lety

      Pleased you made it Marco.

  • @dacracking5768
    @dacracking5768 Před 3 lety +11

    I absolutely love the NHS, it’s an amazing thing which is underappreciated.

  • @KopCole
    @KopCole Před 4 lety +63

    I’d rather live in a country where if I had an accident or a life threatening disease I’d be cared for and not have to worry about being bankrupt or worse still...left to die. Call it socialised healthcare..call it what you want.

    • @hamdi.abshir5957
      @hamdi.abshir5957 Před 4 lety +2

      @Laurence Cursaro What if u lost ur Job randomly, and u had an accident then ur done for. NHS is for everyone rich or poor .

    • @iainansell5930
      @iainansell5930 Před 4 lety +2

      @@hamdi.abshir5957 not to mention your insurance might not cover something they deem as your negligence, caused it...

  • @sadiaislam932
    @sadiaislam932 Před 4 lety +284

    The NHS is why I’m proud to be British.

    • @Blorp_
      @Blorp_ Před 4 lety

      I'm sorry

    • @sunseeker9581
      @sunseeker9581 Před 4 lety +3

      What about our music, comedy, our history. Ok scrap the last one 😉

    • @garthtomlinson2570
      @garthtomlinson2570 Před 4 lety

      Forza Juve our history is one of the proudest parts

    • @sunseeker9581
      @sunseeker9581 Před 4 lety +3

      @@garthtomlinson2570 only if you admire slavery, pillaging, and murder. The British empire committed huge attrocities

    • @L45456
      @L45456 Před 4 lety +1

      Forza Juve most of europe are the same, your ancestors are probably european, so...

  • @vpsn99
    @vpsn99 Před 3 lety +10

    I heard US is the only country in the world with no maternity leaves.

    • @nou4605
      @nou4605 Před 3 lety

      India has maternity leaves ffs

    • @boggeyy263
      @boggeyy263 Před 3 lety

      Setanjan Roy can you read ? He said the US is the only country with out maternity leave.

    • @LILFOC1
      @LILFOC1 Před 3 lety

      I remember commenting on a video to express my shock there was only 3month maternity leave in the US (in the UK your entitled to a min of six paid by a mix of the gov and the business with some companies offerings to to at least a year off) and an American responded "well why should the company or gov pay for someone not working" which really answered my question and tells you all you need to know about employment rights in America

  • @krisinsaigon
    @krisinsaigon Před 3 lety +2

    i'm british and we have the same idea as americans - we have an insurance system, everyone pays into the insurance fund and that money pays for the health care of those who get sick.
    What we don't have though is people making profit from it.
    I never understand americans who say they don't want their money to go to pay for other people- that's what an insurance system is. the people whose houses don't burn down are the ones who pay when someone else's house does burn down

  • @larryfroot
    @larryfroot Před 4 lety +178

    I owe my life to the NHS.

  • @joannegriffiths1400
    @joannegriffiths1400 Před 4 lety +108

    This is a poor film and representation of how fantastic the NHS really is. As an infertile woman I have received endless test, appointments and ivf treatment and all funded. We’re thankful for our NHS!

    • @catherinerobilliard7662
      @catherinerobilliard7662 Před 4 lety +15

      My daughter-in-law is Type 1 diabetic, the NHS give insulin, needles, checkup etc all free. When she became pregnant a pump made sure no harm came to her or her babies. The NHS made me a grandmother.

    • @Simonio8
      @Simonio8 Před 4 lety +8

      Yeah, I think they underplayed the nhs here.

    • @sw1000xg
      @sw1000xg Před 4 lety +1

      And that I say is abuse of the nhs. Its not life threatening or an emergency. And for me shouldn't be allowed. For that kind of treatment you should pay.

    • @catherinerobilliard7662
      @catherinerobilliard7662 Před 4 lety +11

      @@sw1000xg since when has the NHS only been for emergencies? You're confusing it with dialling 999 emergency, as the NHS also has 111 if you wish to speak to a medical practitioner. The NHS mantra is free healthcare for all at the point of delivery. As for paying taxes, I've paid in for 45 years and it's the only tax I won't quibble to pay extra.

    • @damedusa5107
      @damedusa5107 Před 4 lety +9

      sw1000xg I think you misunderstand what a health service is. What does that have to do with emergencies only? That really is a stupid comment.

  • @chrislewis8714
    @chrislewis8714 Před 3 lety +3

    I live in the UK and when my daughter was born it was not entirely free. I had to pay for parking.....I managed it.

  • @lizjohnson6324
    @lizjohnson6324 Před 3 lety +1

    Please listen to this I live in the uk I am Irish I came to England when I was 2 years old .The NHS is amazing and I say again amazing .I payed along with everyone els through my wages when I worked .i didn't miss it It wasn't expensive .i had a major operation at 17 years old if I hadn't had this emergency operation I would not be here now .I have had 8 major opps since and several small opps .I thank god for the NHS I do not know what I would have done with out the NHS .i did not pay one penny yes Not ONe PENNY .i am 68 years old and owe my life to the NHS .It Works .keep it going .please .god bless the NHS .xxxxxxxx

  • @torranirwinnw5422
    @torranirwinnw5422 Před 4 lety +149

    In the uk even the right would brand people as insane to suggest privatising the healthcare system

    • @fkatwigsisthequeenofenglan4748
      @fkatwigsisthequeenofenglan4748 Před 4 lety +10

      tf do you mean when they voted for the ppl that want to do exactly that!!!!! the right are literally trying to do that

    • @paulkenny6145
      @paulkenny6145 Před 4 lety +15

      @@fkatwigsisthequeenofenglan4748 They are literally not

    • @liamclarke9527
      @liamclarke9527 Před 4 lety +13

      @@fkatwigsisthequeenofenglan4748 in the conservative manifesto they are committed to put more money in so who is privatising it ?

    • @liamclarke9527
      @liamclarke9527 Před 4 lety +5

      @Crom so by your logic state schools are privatised as they buy pencils from a private company?

    • @davidtrowers1654
      @davidtrowers1654 Před 4 lety +1

      The far right is just rich bigots