kinnison wrote:PainRack - It wasn't a renovation job at all, it was a completely new building. Offices given priority.
Would it surprise you if offices are easier to build as well as renovate?
Incidentally, did you miss the bit about the wards being replaced having been originally intended to be TEMPORARY structures for use during WWII and still in use - despite the inevitable and obvious problems caused by that - sixty years later?
The Eiffel Tower was only intended to stand for 20 years, but it's still in use today. Should the citizens of France be complaining about what was originally intended to be a TEMPORARY structure for use during the World's Fair still being in use - despite the inevitable and obvious problems caused by that - a hundred years later?
Tell me, do you know the condition that those temporary structures were in for all of those 60 years? Because if they were in an acceptable condition to use, then not only would there be no point in replacing them, but it would also be a pointless waste of money, wouldn't you agree?
And my local hospital is actually one of the good ones - the Third World conditions in some UK hospitals are a disgrace in any Western nation. Hospital infections are rampant just about everywhere, and so on and so on ad nauseam. (A good phrase to use, in this case.) It's all very well having good access to hospital care - but what if you have a pretty high probability of coming out worse than you went in, with a totally unrelated disease? What then?
I suppose you have stats for this "hospital infections are rampant" fact? And you are aware that people in hospitals are more likely to pick up infections than people outside of hospitals, because you generally enter a hospital when your immune system is already weakened, aren't you?
Government financing of health care is not the problem. Government control is - or to be even more specific, centralised government control. The organisation is just too big to work properly if it has to be run from Whitehall.
So why does the UK health system have better results than the US health system, then? In fact, why do the health systems in
all of the countries that I listed before have better results than the US health system? (You know - the ones with universal health care) Are you going to address that point or continue ignoring it because you don't have anything to counter it with?