Over in the USA the long
and intricate story of Obamacare is unfolding as the realities of providing
mass health services impact on the funding and costing structures. As ever in reform and reorganisation there
are winners and losers.
In health matters,
however, there are not supposed to be any losers, especially in complex
cases. It appears that this is happening
at an early stage in paying the bills according
to the linked article in the Washington Post.
What seems to have
happened is that the US Government has become at one and the same time an
insurance company impacting on the insurance sector adversely and a health
provider injecting administrative uncertainty and unpredictability into provision.
Add to that the software
issues about who got the contract, how and did they know what they were
doing. But this has happened at a time
when software engineering itself is in the process of transformation.
It seems that the software
issues in many fields are now becoming too
big to deal with as this Naked Capitalism piece suggests. It is a long post and interesting but scroll
down to the last two paragraphs if you do not have the time.
Here in the UK we are
having our own health care problems, mainly deteriorating health and very patchy
care. There has been a stream of people
going to the US of the past and coming back with this idea or that
initiative. Given the organisation of
the NHS this has led to centralisation and micro control.
The fundamental of UK
health services in the long past were quite different from those of other
nations which would always make attempted "transplants" difficult. The more we try it the worse it gets. And now we have exported some of it to the
USA.
Lately we have taken to
appointing people to the top of the NHS who know little about medicine or
health and a lot about targets and fancy accounting. In the present grotesque fiasco over the
Co-Operative Bank and its leadership it is not being mentioned that if Labour
won the 2015 election the two men concerned had been in the frame to take over
the NHS.
As the US looks to the NHS
and our NHS looks to the US we may be exporting to each other the worst rather
than the best features of our services.
At least this would be consistent with recent government performances.
But there is a real
scenario in which we all lose and it may be arriving. If it does then we are going back to the
future and it will be from a
past that was very different. I remember
that past and it was not a good place to be if you were ill.
Keep taking the pills, for
as long as they last.
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