Well done with getting the scan. Good luck with your OP on tuesday
@D R Oldfield.
Lots of good and bad comments about the NHS. Things have certainly gone downhill since covid. My GP used to be really easy to get an appointment. Now we have to phone. Last phone call to book a blood test I was on hold for 1Hr 20Mins. At least 30mins of that I was "Your are number one, in the queue'".
Problem is money. We all pay National Insurance but that money isn't earmarked for anything. It just goes into the bigger tax pot. It's basically tax with a different name and the health service simply isn't given enough of it - or maybe the NHS just has layers and layers of managers taking salary without actually doing anything.
In Germany, where I lived and worked much of my adult life, everyone pays from their salary into an insurance fund. It's compulsory. If you're unemployed then the state pays the insurance premium so everyone is insured.
But that fund is not given to government to spend on Jags and wallpaper. It's kept solely for health service.
So it is a private system but controlled by the state. Insurer can't refuse to insure somebody or charge more for preexisting conditions.
Then a GP, dentist or hospital doesn't get a wad of cash to budget the year. They only get paid when they actually treat someone. I remember lying on the table having stitches after a work accident and while the doctor is stitching me up there's a clerk with a clip board asking my name, address and who my insurance company is. They need that so they can send the invoice to the insurer.
So because they only get paid when they actually treat someone there's no incentive in delaying treatment or closing wards. They get people in quick and keep the invoices going. Just like KwikFit
One time I broke my ankle - fell off a ladder on the side of my truck - they stitched up the tendon then kept me in for 2 weeks while it healed. Obviously get more money the longer they keep you. Some might then say the hospital could milk the system keeping people in longer than necessary. Maybe. But it seems to be the complete opposite of what we have in the UK.
NHS is an ideal. It sound great. Free health care for all. But can it really work? But mention the word 'Private Insurance' and there's a knee jerk reaction because in many countries private systems are totally unfair. But in some countries it does work.