U.S. should look to Britain for valuable lessons
That Britain’s national health-care system will undergo a historic change [“Major change proposed in British health system,” News, July 24] is significant and sobering but not surprising. It’s an experience with valuable lessons for us over here on the other side of the pond.
Lessons about the inefficiencies of centralized government health care. There’s no value in calling it “socialist” when you can just say, “see, it doesn’t work.” As the man said, “attention must be paid.”
Lessons about what happens when your system is based on a cost-centric rather than a patient-focused philosophy of health care. Yes, we really need to put the 800-pound gorilla on the operating room table. Who needs “death panels” when you have “deny panels”?
And, finally, lessons about money. It really isn’t all about the amount of money you spend if you don’t spend it in the right places. And that’s lesson No. 1.
— Peter Pitts, president, Center for Medicine in the Public Interest Former Associate Commissioner, FDA, New York