The Daily Telegraph

What would you suggest be done to save the NHS?

Last month, we invited readers to come up with ingenious ways that Health Secretary Jeremy Hunt might save on the NHS budget. Here is a selection of your suggestion­s

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Time to go two-tier

Since the NHS’S inception, there have been advances in every field of medicine: think of open-heart surgery, renal dialysis, cardiac pacemakers and artificial hips, to name but a few. Wonder drugs treat almost any condition – but at huge cost. The free-for-all cannot continue.

We should follow the route taken by other European countries to a two-tier system: means-tested, freely available healthcare up to a certain income level, to be topped up thereafter by private insurance.

John Holm Gray,

Reading, Berkshire

Book GP appointmen­ts online

Online booking has become the norm for restaurant­s, flights and hotels, but very few people have the option to book their healthcare online. More than 80per cent of GP appointmen­ts are made over the phone.

Practices that use online booking platforms such as findoc.co.uk are reducing no-shows by up to 70 per cent, filling last-minute openings, decreasing telephone call volumes and email bookings and lowering booking management costs.

Xavier Bernal, London N1

Price-tagging

I suggest labelling all large pieces of equipment – such as X-ray machines, scanners and life-support machines – with the purchase price and maintenanc­e charges, so that patients can see what even the “basic” costs are.

Joan Tait, Staines-upon-thames, Surrey

Charge patients for hospital food

When people are in hospital, they are not paying food bills at home. Why not make a small charge for each day, some for reinvestme­nt, some for better meals?

Elizabeth Church, Northampto­n

Give snips the snip

The NHS was set up to cure people. What does Botox, vasectomy or breast enhancemen­t cure?

John N H Smith, Ramsgate

Build a volunteer workforce

Adult social services are unsustaina­ble in their current form, so there needs to be a scheme to motivate younger people to volunteer for community organisati­ons. I suggest a small reduction in council tax for those who complete a certain number of accredited volunteeri­ng hours.

Dr Daphne Pearson, Monmouth

Rethink free medication for life

I was diagnosed with no thyroid function at an “early” age and thus qualified for free prescripti­ons for everything. Why? This must be the case for large numbers of the population. Exempt the specific medication, not the person.

Caroline Gorst, Aude, France

‘All GP surgeries should have credit card terminals – as in Europe’

Open discharge units

Bed-blocking is a very costly waste of resources. Some of the millions earmarked for the NHS should be used to build temporary accommodat­ion units for patients who are ready for discharge but waiting either for a home assessment or a nursing home place. These could be staffed mainly by carers and would prevent expensive hospital beds from being blocked.

Dr Dee Dawson, London N20

Pay the NHS direct

Why can’t the NHS reclaim their car parks, and run their own hospital pharmacies?

Joyce Wiles, Enfield, Middlesex

Reintroduc­e central buying

Following the story of one hospital paying 4,500 per cent more than another on rubber gloves, let’s return to NHS England buying and distributi­ng medical supplies to hospitals on a national level. Simon C Meares, Bexhill-onsea, East Sussex

Bring back national service

I think what is missing from the national discourse is a true understand­ing of what the NHS does, and how tireless and dedicated its workers are. If we reintroduc­ed a national service, but with its focus being to support the NHS, young people could do a year’s service and learn all aspects of the care sector. I think this would lead to less needless drunken A&E visits and a greater pride in our fine institutio­n.

Michael W Mchugh, London E14

Charge non-uk citizens at point of need

Rather than tax rises, there are easier ways to fund the NHS:

 Payment at point of use before treatment for those who do not have a UK passport or a UK birth certificat­e, so that EU and non-eu migrants pay, as we do in France.

 All Gps/hospital department­s to have credit card terminals. All EU countries do this, so should we. Gabrielle Teare, London SW3

Clamp down on staff pensions

Examples of NHS waste on a huge scale include the six million missed hospital appointmen­ts per year, prescripti­ons for gluten-free foods, mobility aids given out free (there is no means-testing). And all this in an organisati­on that offers an eyewaterin­gly generous early retirement scheme to the staff it cannot afford to lose and cannot readily replace.

Matthew Sands, Horncastle, Lincolnshi­re

 ??  ?? Paying dividends: Jeremy Hunt, the Health Secretary, has negotiated an extra £384 million per week for the NHS, but it came with warnings that taxes will have to rise to pay for it
Paying dividends: Jeremy Hunt, the Health Secretary, has negotiated an extra £384 million per week for the NHS, but it came with warnings that taxes will have to rise to pay for it
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