It’s always fun to fact-check Paul Krugman. His sense of
reality is so defective, it does not take very much effort.
You recall a statement he made when he was arguing for
nationalizing or Obamacizing health care in America:
In
Britain, the government itself runs the hospitals and employs the doctors.
We’ve all heard scare stories about how that works in practice; these stories
are false.
Krugman believes in giving more power to bureaucrats and
taking more power away from the free market. It doesn't matter what the problem is. His solution is always more taxes and more spending.
To fact-check his statement—it has been done, here and
elsewhere, over and over again—we turn to the Daily Mail. The paper reports on
a study of the condition in the Emergency Room (called A & E, that is,
Accident and Emergency) in one of Britain’s best hospitals.
The Daily Mail reports:
These
are the shocking scenes inside the A&E unit of one of the country's
top-performing hospitals.
At one
point last week there were 95 seriously ill patients waiting to be seen but
only 33 beds.
Mothers
sat on the floor with their babies on their laps while the elderly queued up on
trolleys and in wheelchairs.
Managers
at the Royal Blackburn hospital in Lancashire have even resorted to appointing
designated 'corridor nurses' to take care of all the patients waiting without a
bed.
Doctors
say they are 'taking too many risks' by sending patients home early, and nurses
report conditions as 'dangerous' and 'frightening'.
The
images were filmed by the BBC last Sunday and Monday after it was granted
special access by the hospital's chief executive Kevin McGee.
Of course, the BBC and the Labour Party is happy to share
these results. They believe that it can all be solved by throwing more money
into the system. They do not tell us whether there are enough physicians and
nurses available. They do not tell us where the money is going to come from.
When socialist schemes fail, the solution is always to tax
more and to throw money at the problem. Good luck with that.
5 comments:
And it's not just the NHS, it's medical unions as well. Search for UK doctor strike or nurse strike. Not quite as bad as Chicago teachers, but bad enough.
And speaking as a Yank who was a research fellow at a British uni, their physician training is abysmal.
That Paullie "The Beard" Krugman! Always laugh-a-minute wrong.
10,000 holes in Blackburn, Lancashire. Service so slow because they had to count them all.
10,000 holes in Blackburn, Lancashire. Service so slow because they had to count them all.
I think we've known for quite some time that British dentists are not especially skilled.
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