I have lived all my life with the NHS as the normal medical care. It's free at point of need. In my country we don't even pay for prescriptions. We pay our National Insurance and we don't fret about health care costs. Most folks don't bother with private insurance, though it's becoming more common as part of the 'work package'. Audiology and hearing aids are free, (and they are top of the range, world class instruments, tiny and very discreet) as are the check ups, the adjustments and the batteries. Eye tests are free and many get part of the costs of spectacles covered by the NHS too.
Dentistry used to be the same. I still have an NHS Dentist, and she's very good. There are some things though that the NHS does not cover with the Dentist though, and I admit that it comes as a surprise to have to mind and take my purse with me to pay the bill. I don't grudge it, the lady earns her living honestly enough
and compared to American teeth the ones around here are every bit as good, just that we generally don't bleach them and we don't really like all those little caps that ping off, so we avoid those. Neither of my sons, now in their thirties have any lost teeth or have any fillings. They do have very attractive natural smiles
good sound teeth, and they've never been to a private Dentist in their lives.
There's a tremendous amount of slagging off gets done agin the NHS....yet funnily enough most of it stems from those who make money from providing private health care of one kind or another. On the ground, here, it works and it works very well indeed.
Our healthcare is socialised, everybody pays for it, it's well named National Insurance, and everybody can access it as necessary.
Look for the agenda behind the propaganda !
It's not so very long ago that it finally dawned on me that elsewhere in the so-called First World, people really do go without health care because they, "cannot afford it". To us that is a horrendous thought, to be unable to get medical care for cancer and the like, or to do so and end up in so much debt that families become homeless. Terribly British/ northern European of us, but there it is.
Those two books were recommended sometime in the early years of the forum, and at least one missionary I know says that the Where there is no Doctor one is literally a lifesaver. Another friend works with MSF and again, wholeheartedly approves of the book and the ethos behind it; that local on the ground healthcare people are welcome to freely download and use, and contact and advise on changes, etc., too. Inclusive not exclusive.
Good to hear about the Dentistry one too. Many of the skeletons that we find from the Neolithic onwards have real problems with teeth/abcesses, etc.,
Something to do with the suddenly heavily biased carbohydrate rich diet and poor tooth cleaning perhaps ?
M