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Originally Posted by Brianne http://www.askaboutmoney.com/showthread.php?p=649260#post649260
Health care is an endless demand curve and all this talk about the private system being efficient is just that.........talk.
The private system doesn't deal with major accidents, old people with dementia and multi disease who are waiting on suitable nursing homes. The private system doesn't have the orthopaedic lists f.......d up for the next two days because joy riders or drunken drivers or plain road traffic victims need urgent operations and automatically jump the list.The private system can pick and choose, the public system can't.
They operate on you in the private system but if things go really wrong, where do you end up.......back in casualty at 3 am being looked after by the public system.
Agreed
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I dont know about this one. There is no reason why A&E couldnt be put out to tender on the basis that whoever wins the tender has to deal with whatever injuries present themselves on a given day. There is an element of risk in this given that there will be quiet times and peaks, but, there is a lot of data on the accident rates available and so a company can price the extra costs associated with the demand risk. This is not an impossible service for a private sector organisation to provide - remember that most of the public health service A&E departments in Dublin are privately owned (Beaumont, Mater, St James, St Vincents) and are already doing this job in the context of the aforemention "Railtrack UK" monopoly situation. These hospitals are already coping with whatever is thrown at them. I dare say that if there was competition and the business was tendered, we would probably get a more efficient service at cheaper cost.
The argument is always made that private A&E would cut corners to save costs. I dont believe this as people would die thus pushing their mortality rate above norms. If too many people die, they'd lose the contract, so it is more profitable in the long run for them to provide a high level of care in order to keep the lucrative contract. Using my "hospitals must do procedures to make a profit argument" earlier in this thread, if A&Es were paid on a volume related basis rather than a lump sum basis, it would be in their interests to give better care as it would earn them more money. In terms of medical costs, the main difference between A&E and any other type of medicine is the demand risk - you cant schedule A&E whereas you can schedule other injuries. And demand risk CAN be priced.