Daily Mail

Why can’t doctors and nurses admit Tory NHS cuts are a myth?

- DrMax@dailymail.co.uk

WHEn it comes to the NHS, the mantra ‘ Tory cuts’ is repeated so many times that it’s just assumed to be true. in medicine, you hear it over and over again, with no one ever seeming to stop and question it.

i find this particular­ly strange given that doctors are supposed to practise evidence-based medicine and are, therefore, used to questionin­g data and asking for proof of claims.

all over social media, doctors and nurses are warning that Theresa May will spell the end of the NHS.

Well, i don’t buy it. if anything, labour messed up when they were in power, rolling out disastrous policies, such as the Private Finance initiative, which are now causing so many problems.

But go on social media and there is a cacophony of dire warnings about how the conservati­ves are destroying the NHS. Many doctors i know who intend to vote Tory daren’t admit this in public for fear of the opprobrium they will face from the liberal left.

yet a report this week from the national institute of Economic and social Research found that health service spending is at its highest level in history. The report makes it clear that Jeremy corbyn’s accusation­s that the Tories have presided over deep ‘cuts’ to the NHS budget are simply wrong.

THEannual spend on the NHS has now reached £2,160 per person, and the figure has continued to rise steadily in terms of the percentage of Britain’s total income, increasing from 4.7 per cent in 1997 to 7.4 per cent last year.

What’s more, the Tories have pledged to pump in an extra £8 billion a year by 2022/23 — which is more than the £7.4 billion pledged by labour

But still, the lie that Tories have presided over NHS cuts endures. Why?

i think it’s because accepting this lie is easier than facing reality. For the cold, hard truth is that, despite record levels of spending, our national Health service is collapsing.

For make no mistake, it is collapsing. it breaks my heart to say this, but for some time those of us at the coalface have known that things can’t go on much longer. services are being axed or stripped to the bone. But this is

not because the Government is taking money away.

The bitter pill to swallow is that, despite record funds being put in, the demands made on the NHS are outstrippi­ng the money.

The problem is that the calls on our health service are growing exponentia­lly. We expect it to give us whatever we want — but advances in medicine, combined with an ageing population, mean that the costs of providing this are rising exponentia­lly, too.

The drugs bill for the NHS in the past five years alone has risen by around 50 per cent.

if the NHS is to survive despite these burdens, then we must also take individual responsibi­lity for the way we use it and the pressure we place on its precious resources. The NHS simply doesn’t have bottomless pockets.

yet people don’t want to take responsibi­lity for their health because they don’t see the point — since the NHS will be there to pick up the pieces.

People use and abuse the NHS because they see it as ‘free’. They fail to turn up to appointmen­ts, needlessly call out ambulances or go to a&E because it’s more convenient than seeing a GP. They feel entitled to demand whatever treatment they want.

The problem is that the NHS is from a different, simpler time. it’s an historical artefact, and it’s unrealisti­c to expect it to be able to keep up with the demands this brave new world places on it.

What we really need is a serious, profound debate about what the NHS is actually for.

We need to decide how it’s going to be funded and what we can expect it to provide. Do we, as a society, want the NHS to pay for obesity surgery, or IVF, for example?

several generation­s have now been born and brought up under its care and don’t know anything different. simply put, they take it for granted.

The real problem is not the fantasy of Tory cuts, but the fact that our expectatio­ns of the NHS are more than it can ever deliver.

i Was fascinated to read a piece of research that looked at how we comfort one another. it examined video footage of how people responded to the victim of a crime, looking at their body language and interactio­n with the victim — then compared this with the way primates like chimps demonstrat­ed compassion, which involved different types of physical closeness. The research seems to suggest that offering hugs to soothe victims of violence is a primal instinct. But, to me, it also speaks about the biology of love. The processes that determine human behaviour have been the subject of fierce debate for decades. yet, in one respect, things are refreshing­ly simple. countless studies have shown that love and support are essential factors to normal developmen­t in childhood and beyond. Regardless of how difficult life seems, all we want, deep down, is to feel loved and cared for.

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