Desperate lies
The man who faced a
choice of dropping dead while waiting on the NHS list or bluffing.
Early in August, a story broke about retired painter and decorator, Roy
Thayers, having to lie in order to be free of terrible pain he'd been
suffering for years, because of heart trouble.
A cardiac specialist warned the 77-year-old that he needed a lifesaving
operation as soon as possible, because he was in danger of having a
fatal heart attack at any time. He was told the coronary angioplasty
treatment he required would not be available from the NHS for nine
months because of a waiting list, but added that by going private, Roy
could have the operation within a week. Being penniless, Roy had the
option of dropping dead while waiting on the NHS list or bluffing. He
chose the latter, and said he'd pay, when he knew he couldn't.
He managed to stall requests for payment by hospital
administrators,claiming he mislaid his chequebook. His operation took
place quickly, he wrote out a "Mickey Mouse cheque" for the
£8,500 cost the very next day, knowing he'd have to face the
consequences later.
Speaking of his ploy, Roy said: "I love life, I love my dogs, I love
fishing - why should I die for the sake of money?" Indeed, why should
bits of paper decide who lives and who dies, or who eats and who
starves, or who has a comfortable home and who has a stinking hovel,
and so on?
It's sick and idiotic. But seeing how, under capitalism, goods and
services are provided to make profit - not meet needs - this system has
created a universal comparison commodity (a.k.a. money) against which
other commodities can be measured. Comprising paper
notes, metal discs or mere digital data, this comparison commodity
exists in order that those with something others need can make its
supply dependent upon receiving a specified amount of this measuring
tool. No money, no provision.
When Tony Blair developed a dicky ticker, naturally, he got treated
very quickly. No long delay for the likes of him. Not forgetting that
the Oxford Radcliffe NHS Trust, having provided the PM with his cardiac
catheter ablation operation, shortly afterwards decided to deny this
treatment to others in order to cut costs and meet the government's
six-month waiting-list targets.
Of course, Roy hasn't managed to defeat capitalism by writing his
rubber cheque. For a start, as he said himself, "I paid into the NHS
for years to look after me, but the doctors were telling me they
wouldn't, so who's robbing who?" Furthermore, the Primary Care Trust
(PCT) in charge of the hospital that treated him was soon threatening
to send in the bailiffs, and he eventually settled on repaying his debt
at £25 a week from his meagre pension.
No doubt, private health care enterprises will now do their utmost to
ensure people have sufficient funds before they get treated in future.
So although the money-loving Sun tabloid praised Roy for being "canny",
and the profit-hungry Mirror said "well done", don't count on acquiring
desperately needed medical care by the same method.
The fact is, no one should have to come up with devious methods to
obtain critical health care or any other essential services and goods.
In a decent and rational world these would be available according to
need - not how much money people have depending on how much, or little,
capitalism has allowed them to have in return for their exploitation
and control by a minority ruling class.
The only reason this appalling and damaging situation continues is
because we allow it. If all those unhappy and irate with the way
they're made to live, work and struggle on pitiful pensions came
together with the aim of getting rid of the system which allows a super
rich minority and their money mechanism to control, deprive and
manipulate this majority, then capitalism would be in serious trouble.
Roy Thayers is also quoted as saying: "The real working classes of this
country - the ones who have very little money - have been abandoned by
their own government." From his own experience, Roy might well now
accept that this government (and those before it) has never had the
needs of the electorate as its priority. The main concern has always
been looking after British capitalists, not the working class majority.
The answer isn't more money for the NHS - since in a competitive world,
there'll always be pressure on all governments to keep cutting back on
state funding, and increasingly make people pay directly for what they
need. No. The answer is a society with no money at all.
That's the only way to end the idiocy where, these days, NHS hospital
employees are being told by PCTs to stop "overperforming" by providing
treatment too quickly, because the government then financially
penalises the Trusts for not adhering to minimum waiting times (as a
result, one gynaecologist said he now spent more time doing sudoku
puzzles than treating patients). And a moneyless society is also the
only way to end the obscenity of driving people to desperate lies and
deceit to obtain vital life-saving treatment that should be available
to all - not just those sufficiently well off or powerful.
MAX HESS |
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