The Courier & Advertiser (Perth and Perthshire Edition)

We cannot afford to be smug about future of the NHS

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Sir, – I fear the NHS is being geared up for privatisat­ion by stealth on a large scale.

Recently the prime minister appointed as a health adviser a woman that was head of Operose, the UK subsidiary of Centene Corporatio­n, a large US health insurance provider.

Operose last month took over 37 GP practices in London. This appears to be the favoured model.

Not only has Centene taken control of a valuable public asset it will gain access to all the records of the 500,000 people covered by the practices.

The latter is a valuable resource for those wanting to sell drugs to the NHS and insurance to individual­s.

We in Scotland who have public control of the NHS should not be smug about retaining the NHS in public hands.

The impact of privatisat­ion

an election and form a Scottish government.

David Roche.

Hill House, Coupar Angus. south of the border will have huge implicatio­ns for the way the NHS is run in Scotland.

Indeed, the Westminste­r Government refused repeatedly to put safeguards around the NHS in its recent Trade Act – so that now the NHS could well be a major bargaining chip in any trade negotiatio­ns and future deals.

Trade deals are a retained power within Westminste­r.

honourable man so he cannot behave like a hypocrite by turning a blind eye to all of the many untruths, deceits and other actions by his Westminste­r overlords. Harry Key.

Mid Street, Largoward.

Therefore anything agreed by the UK Government in terms of trade deals will override anything we want to do in Scotland, including retaining public control of the NHS.

I, and many others, are grateful for all the NHS has achieved for us and our loved ones over the years.

We should not allow it to be sold off for private profit. Brian Batson.

Lour Road, Forfar.

Sweden and 428 for Cyprus.

EU countries of a similar population to Scotland vary, from Finland with three times our rate, up to Croatia with a rate almost 20 times higher.

Ireland is on an incidence of 56.8 per 100,000 which is more than 3.5 times our rate.

This success for Britain is down to the fact that being outside the EU gave us the flexibilit­y to procure massive supplies of vaccine for ourselves rather than wait for the Commission, which both ordered late and failed to allow for a vaccine failing trials.

When will the nationalis­ts learn that leaving the UK in order to rejoin the EU is not in our interests?

Otto Inglis. Ansonhill, Crossgates.

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