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Keyword: ukhealth

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  • The BBC won’t tell you that 4 in 5 Covid-19 Deaths in past month were among the Triple/Double Vaccinated according to Official Data

    12/30/2021 3:49:58 PM PST · by ransomnote · 33 replies
    dailyexpose.uk ^ | 12/29/21 | EXPOSÉ
    The latest figures published by the UK Health Security Agency show that despite the elderly and vulnerable receiving a booster shot in September and October, and the NHS turning into the National Booster Service ever since, the triple/double vaccinated population still accounted for 4 in every 5 Covid-19 deaths in the four weeks up to December 19th 2021.The ‘Covid-19 Vaccine Surveillance Report – Week 51’ was published by the UK Health Security Agency (formerly Public Health England) on Thursday 22nd December 2021, and it shows that the vast majority of Covid-19 cases between November 22nd and December 19th were among...
  • Children are up to 16 times more likely to die with Covid-19 if they’ve had the Covid Vaccine according to latest UK Health Security Agency report

    10/22/2021 4:52:18 PM PDT · by ransomnote · 19 replies
    theexpose.uk ^ | October 22, 2021 | TheExpose
    The latest report from the UK Health Security Agency shows that the Chief Medical Officer (CMO) for England’s decision to recommend all children over the age of 12 should be vaccinated against Covid-19 was a huge mistake because the data shows children are 16 times more likely to die with Covid-19 if they have been vaccinated.Chris Whitty; the CMO for England, overruled the Joint Committee on Vaccination and Immunisation (JCVI) on the 13th September 2021 and wrote a letter to the UK Government advising them to offer the Pfizer Covid-19 injection to all children over the age of 12 with...
  • Death Panels Begin As Reform Takes Shape

    08/18/2010 4:52:33 PM PDT · by Kaslin · 20 replies
    IBD Editorials ^ | August 18, 2010 | Investors Business Daily staff
    Medicine: After the recess appointment of a Medicare and Medicaid head, an FDA panel drops its endorsement of a widely used cancer drug. Another FDA-approved cancer therapy may not be paid for. It begins. It didn't take long for the health care philosophy of Dr. Donald Berwick, President Obama's choice to head the Centers for Medicaid and Medicare Services, and an appointee we have labeled a "one-man death panel," to have an effect. Berwick is an admirer of Britain's National Health Service and its National Institute for Clinical Excellence, with the Orwellian-acronym NICE. "NICE," Berwick has said, "is extremely effective...
  • Redistributing Health?

    05/14/2010 5:43:54 PM PDT · by SmartInsight · 20 replies · 732+ views
    Investor's Business Daily ^ | May 14, 2010 | IBD Editorial
    Medicine: The administration's nominee to run Medicare and Medicaid is a fan of Britain's National Health Service and rationing services. He believes in less discretion for your doctor, more power for your government. 'The decision is not whether or not we will ration care — the decision is whether we will ration with our eyes open" is what Dr. Donald Berwick, President Obama's nominee to head the Centers for Medicaid and Medicare Services, said in an interview published in Biotechnology Healthcare in June 2009. The question is whether the Senate will confirm Berwick with open eyes. Berwick says: "NICE is...
  • '50,000 people die from malnutrition a year in NHS hospitals,' claim Tories

    02/26/2010 2:57:58 PM PST · by pissant · 15 replies · 510+ views
    Daily Mail UK ^ | 2/26/10 | James Chapman
    Almost 50,000 Health Service patients a year are dying while suffering from malnutrition in hospitals in England, shocking figures suggest. A Government report says official statistics which claim that just 239 people a year die from malnutrition in hospital are 'very misleading'. It warns than 200 times as many patients die while not properly nourished. Critics attacked ministers after it emerged that the report was delivered in August last year, but has only just been released. Health campaigners have said that elderly patients in particular are often treated as 'second class citizens' on wards.
  • Prisoners have a better diet than National Health Service hospital patients, scientists warn

    08/31/2009 8:39:00 AM PDT · by WhiteCastle · 10 replies · 927+ views
    DailyMail.co.uk ^ | August 31, 2009 | Daniel Martin
    Patients in Health Service hospitals are far more likely to go hungry than criminals in jail, scientists warned yesterday. They say frail and elderly patients do not get the help they need with meals, and nobody checks whether they get enough to eat. Despite years of Government promises to tackle poor hospital nutrition, food still arrives cold, and patients often miss out because meal times clash with tests and operations. The Daily Mail has been highlighting the scandal of old people not being fed properly in hospital as part of its Dignity for the Elderly campaign The latest figures show...
  • Tragic Tales From The NHS

    08/27/2009 5:08:40 PM PDT · by Kaslin · 8 replies · 901+ views
    IBD Editorials ^ | August 27, 2009 | INVESTORS BUSINESS DAILY Staff
    Health Care Reform: A study by the British Patients Association tells the true story about socialized medicine in Britain. It's one of willful and woeful neglect of millions, missed diagnoses, and elderly patients left in pain.BD Exclusive Series: Government-Run Healthcare: A Prescription For FailureWhile reading this disturbing analysis of the pitiful state of medical care in Britain in the Daily Telegraph, the Vincent Price horror classic "The Abominable Dr. Phibes" came to mind. Price portrayed a man who used bizarre methods to dispatch his victims. The abominable British National Health Service, based on this report, is only slightly better. The...
  • P.S. On Hawking (IBD Exclusive Series: Government-Run Healthcare: A Prescription For Failure)

    08/27/2009 5:22:03 PM PDT · by Kaslin · 7 replies · 689+ views
    IBD Editorials ^ | IBD Editorials | INVESTORS BUSINESS DAILY Staff
    Medical Care: We took a lot of heat for using Stephen Hawking as an example of someone who'd suffer under a socialized health system. But a closer look at the treatment he got in the U.K. shows it wasn't all roses.As our Aug. 1 editorial put it: "People such as scientist Stephen Hawking wouldn't have a chance in the U.K., where the National Health Service would say the life of this brilliant man, because of his physical handicaps, is essentially worthless." Now, Hawking is British and — though he suffers from amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS), often referred to as "Lou...
  • 'Cruel And Neglectful' Care Of One Million NHS Patients Exposed [One Million Victims!]

    08/26/2009 5:05:04 PM PDT · by Steelfish · 8 replies · 373+ views
    Telegraph(UK) ^ | August 25, 2009
    'Cruel and neglectful' care of one million NHS patients exposed One million NHS patients have been the victims of appalling care in hospitals across Britain, according to a major report released today. By Rebecca Smith, Medical Editor 27 Aug 2009 In the last six years, the Patients Association claims hundreds of thousands have suffered from poor standards of nursing, often with 'neglectful, demeaning, painful and sometimes downright cruel' treatment. The charity has disclosed a horrifying catalogue of elderly people left in pain, in soiled bed clothes, denied adequate food and drink, and suffering from repeatedly cancelled operations, missed diagnoses and...
  • Bed shortage forces 4,000 mothers to give birth in lifts, offices and hospital toilets

    08/26/2009 6:03:22 AM PDT · by WhiteCastle · 24 replies · 1,416+ views
    DailyMail.co.uk ^ | August 26, 2009 | Jenny Hope and Nick Mcdermott
    Thousands of women are having to give birth outside maternity wards because of a lack of midwives and hospital beds. The lives of mothers and babies are being put at risk as births in locations ranging from lifts to toilets - even a caravan - went up 15 per cent last year to almost 4,000. Additionally, overstretched maternity units shut their doors to any more women in labour on 553 occasions last year. Babies were born in offices, lifts, toilets and a caravan, according to the Freedom of Information data for 2007 and 2008 from 117 out of 147 trusts...
  • NHS Scandal: £100-an-hour Poles and Lithuanians fly in for shifts our doctors won't do

    08/26/2009 5:21:21 AM PDT · by WhiteCastle · 6 replies · 476+ views
    DailyMail.co.uk ^ | August 25, 2009 | Rebecca Camber
    The huge extent to which the NHS needs foreign doctors to treat patients out of hours is revealed today. A third of primary care trusts are flying in GPs from as far away as Lithuania, Poland, Germany, Hungary, Italy and Switzerland because of a shortage of doctors in Britain willing to work in the evenings and at weekends. The stand-ins earn up to £100 an hour, and one trust paid Polish and German doctors a total of £267,000 in a year, a Daily Mail investigation has found. It raises fresh concerns that British patients are being treated by exhausted doctors...
  • Over 45,000 NHS staff call in sick each day

    08/25/2009 4:47:34 PM PDT · by WhiteCastle · 6 replies · 494+ views
    Telegraph.co.uk ^ | August 19, 2009 | Andy Bloxham
    Over 45,000 NHS staff call in sick every day, which is lowering standards of patient care, according to the first national NHS Health and Wellbeing Review into staff habits. The NHS loses 10.3 million working days annually due to sickness absence alone, costing £1.7 billion per year. David Cameron, the Conservative leader, said the figures were "very depressing" but reflected broader problems with public health in society as a whole. He told GMTV: "They are very depressing figures, and they show that the NHS itself has to do better. "But I think they also reflect a light on a problem...
  • N.Y. Times Reporter Piles On Support of Britain's 'Free' Health Service

    08/23/2009 3:36:35 PM PDT · by WhiteCastle · 12 replies · 556+ views
    Newsbusters.org ^ | August 21, 2009 | Tim Graham
    In a Friday story headlined "Britons Fault Health Service, Until Someone Else Does," Times London correspondent Sarah Lyall singled out Republican criticism of British health care, citing tiny protests, larger Twitter campaigns, and exercised editorials in The Economist magazine about "irresponsible distortions" by conservatives in America. While Britons love to complain about waiting lists, disparities in treatment, "infection-breeding hospitals" and "top-heavy bureaucracy," they are seemingly unanimous in opposition to Obama critics: They are furious, for example, that the health service is being held up as an example of the failures of socialized medicine by Americans opposed to President Obama’s health...
  • U.K. on Obamacare: Been there, done that

    08/19/2009 8:44:45 AM PDT · by Woodland · 313+ views
    WorldNetDaily ^ | 08-19-08 | Matt Barber
    Lincoln's Gettysburg Address comes to mind. In the art of persuasion, it's often most effective to paint in brief, colorful strokes. A savvy reader with the handle "Jerseyvet" made an incisive observation after perusing my latest column concerning Obamacare: "Start out with the premise that the demand for health care is infinite, but the supply is finite," he wrote. "So health care has to be rationed. I trust the market, unfettered by governmental restrictions, more than the government. The Canadian and British systems of health care reinforce my belief." Jerseyvet – clearly one of those acerbate, "un-American" town hall "astroturfers"...
  • Family told by NHS: Alzheimer's is not a 'health condition'

    08/21/2009 6:02:32 AM PDT · by WhiteCastle · 34 replies · 828+ views
    Telegraph.co.uk ^ | August 18,, 2009 | Nick Britten
    NHS Worcestershire ruled that Judith Roe, 74, did not qualify for NHS funding because her condition was a "social" rather than "health" problem, even though she was so ill she could not make a cup of tea and regularly left the stove on. She was forced to sell her £200,000 home to pay her £600-a-week nursing home fees, which would have been funded if she had been categorised correctly. Her son, Richard, 40, urged other families in a similar situation to fight for the care they are entitled to. He said: "The way the health trust behaved was scandalous. It...
  • Woe, Canada! (IBD Exclusive Series: Government-Run Healthcare: A Prescription For Failure)

    08/20/2009 6:19:11 PM PDT · by Kaslin · 11 replies · 1,254+ views
    IBD Editorials ^ | August 20, 2009 | INVESTORS BUSINESS DAILY Staff
    Medical Care: A leaked report shows that Vancouver's health authority is considering cutting thousands of surgeries to balance the budget. However organized, government-run health care inevitably leads to rationing.Defenders of ObamaCare continually point out that their plan is not like Canada's, that holding that country's system up as an example of impending medical doom is invalid. Canada's system is different. Instead of having a single national plan, Canada's national health insurance, a kind of public option, is composed of 13 interlocking provincial and territorial plans, all framed under the Canada Health Act. But based on a report leaked to the...
  • 1,000 cancer patients 'refused treatment'

    08/14/2009 4:25:25 AM PDT · by Schnucki · 27 replies · 1,818+ views
    Telegraph (U.K.) ^ | August 14, 2009 | Kate Devlin
    Charities warned that patients with less common forms of cancer were being discriminated against, while others condemned the system as a “scandal”. Patients and their doctors can appeal for the NHS to pay for drugs not currently licensed for that type of the disease. But one in three applications were turned down in the last three years, leaving patients having to pay up £20,000 for the medication themselves. The Rarer Cancers Forum, who obtained the figures, said that patients in France were up to 55 per cent more likely to get so-called “near-label” treatment, drugs licensed for a similar disease,...
  • A ‘Me-Too’ Tory Warning On Health Care Reform

    08/19/2009 12:19:47 PM PDT · by WhiteCastle · 7 replies · 405+ views
    Washington Examiner ^ | August 17, 2009 | Editorial staff
    President Ronald Reagan once said “federal programs are the nearest thing to eternal life we will ever see on this Earth.” There is a timely reminder of Reagan’s maxim in the weekend’s headlines from across the Big Pond in Britain, where Tory leader David Cameron went out of his way to reassure voters there that he and his party are just as committed to defending the National Health Service as the Labor Party. “No one should be in any doubt, for the Conservative Party, the NHS is our number one priority,” Cameron told the Daily Mail Online. Cameron was reacting...
  • Health Care Here And Over There

    08/12/2009 5:37:09 PM PDT · by Kaslin · 11 replies · 788+ views
    IBD Editorials ^ | August 12, 2009 | INVESTORS BUSINESS DAILY Staff
    Reform: If the world's most famous physicist, Stephen Hawking, is a shining example of British health care, how is it that others in the U.K. are repeatedly denied critical care and medicine?In commenting on efforts to overhaul American's health care system, we have tried to pull back the curtain and pay attention to those trying to clone the systems of Canada and Britain. But supporters of government-run health care frequently ignore some of the less-pleasant facts. Much has been made of this statement in one of our Aug. 3 editorials: "People such as scientist Stephen Hawking wouldn't have a chance...
  • Government Medicine Kills - The U.K. and Canada prove it.

    08/07/2009 10:09:56 AM PDT · by neverdem · 14 replies · 1,030+ views
    National Review Online ^ | August 07, 2009 | Deroy Murdock
    August 07, 2009, 0:00 a.m. Government Medicine KillsThe U.K. and Canada prove it. By Deroy Murdock Imagine that your two best friends are British and Canadian tobacco addicts. The Brit battles lung cancer. The Canadian endures emphysema and wheezes as he walks around with clanging oxygen canisters. You probably would not think: “Maybe I should pick up smoking.” The fact that America is even considering government medicine is equally wacky. The state guides health care for our two closest allies: Great Britain and Canada. Like us, these are prosperous, industrial, Anglophone democracies. Nevertheless, compared to America, they suffer higher...