That's the problem with describing private medicine as well. It gets slandered by foreign nationals who've never used it. If I come across as putting down the NHS that's not my intention. They do pretty good for what they are (a socialized system ---- run by government rather than driven by patient demand)......BTW stories come from foreign nationals who have never used it, foreign governments in hock to their private system HMOs, internal politicians with an axe to find against those in power. It's a political potato being kicked around for political arguments.
Still I went to the gp for a wheezing issue and was in and out of x-ray with an all clear in the time it took me to drive into town from the gp, park up and go into the x-ray department. I literally walked in gave my name and got xrayed. It's been a good as that before but it's been worse. So far nobody in our family have had a bad service. Truly bad that is.
Realize however that when you give your opinions they're based on never having been to a proper private doctor or hospital. Do they ask about my insurance? I'm thankful to say that, yes, they do. Why am I thankful? Because it means the admin person asking that and filling out the forms has just become my secretary for the case and is doing all the paperwork and filing for me.
Do I get in and out as quickly as you described? My answer has the same qualifier you used; sometimes. This morning my regular podiatry appointment took less than 20 minutes from the time I walked in the door (5 minutes of that was me updating changes to my meds since my last visit) Normally I'm seen before my appointment time if I show up early; sometimes I've had to wait as long as a half hour past the scheduled time if the doctor had something unexpected come up.
I've been treated in the NHS system when I was there and was disspointed. Mostly by the doctor's attitude. He acted exactly like what he was (an official with authority to decide what was or was not allowed on the taxpayer's dime) rather than how a doctor in private practice would act (a valuable professional the patient can easily replace) I suppose another contention was that the NHS is indeed a "system." That means it has a bureaucracy in charge. Private medicine is mostly between the patient (customer) and the doctor (consultant) Even the interference from insurance agencies has to bow to competition from other agencies.
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