Fixing Britain’s health service means fixing its family doctors
Don’t change the partnership model. Do change the targets
Britons used to see the National Health Service (NHS) as a source of pride. It is now a source of danger. Leaked data suggest that, in one week in December, over 50,000 sick people in England waited more than 12 hours to be admitted to hospital from accident-and-emergency (A&E) departments. The Economist’s mortality model echoes the warnings from emergency doctors: around one in four excess deaths in recent months is attributable to delays in emergency care.
This article appeared in the Leaders section of the print edition under the headline “The doctor won’t see you now”
Leaders January 14th 2023
More from Leaders
Mario Draghi’s best ideas are those Europe finds least comfortable
The danger is that it picks the easy ones
The Labour government’s worrying lack of ambition in Europe
Sir Keir Starmer is trapped by the mindset of the post-Brexit years
A make-or-break moment for Mexico
In America’s biggest trading partner the rule of law and democracy are under attack
The real problem with China’s economy
The country risks making some of the mistakes the Soviet Union did
What to do about America’s killer cars
The country’s roads are nearly twice as dangerous as the rich-world average. It doesn’t have to be that way
How to deal with the hard-right threat in Germany
As extremists win more votes across Europe, forming moderate and effective governments is getting harder