Yes Im68Now, "in our working lives we had an expectation from cradle to grave", but that was at the inception of the NHS in the 1940s when financially it was possible . There have been so many advances in medical research and treatments that many conditions from which we now expect to survive were unthinkable/ unavailable in the early days of the NHS. e.g. premature baby care, cancer treatments, heart operations, misuse of A&E for minor and alcohol related conditions ,and life-enhancing drug treatments for chronic conditions.
All of these are very costly and the irony of this is , of course, that we are living longer which again puts a strain on resources.
I agree with spyder08, changes will have to be made whatever the political scene. I am no "number cruncher" but throwing vast amounts of money at the present system (even if the money was available) would not support the system in its present form and tinkering here and there will not effect a radical improvement. realistically there may have to be a merger between private and NHS care for everyone.
There have been many comments about personal responsibility for one's health and I consider that a long-term health education plan is a start with free assistance for the aforementioned addictions and perhaps a need for a top-up mutual healthcare policies as in France and Switzerland which was discussed in a forum last week.
Emergency and life-threatening cases are teated 100% by the state but one can choose the level of top-up care on a personal need basis for other treatment. Existing conditions are not excluded and anyone on basic pension / social benefits receive 100% state cover.
I realise that this is anathema to many of you who have always expected NI contributions to cover all health costs, but times are a-changing.
Here in France , at the ages of 73, we pay a top-up of € 75 each a month which covers all our medical needs at the same level as private care in the UK. (Our existing conditions include heart, High BP, asthma and arthritis)
Waiting times to see a consultant are minimal: days or a couple of weeks and x-rays/scans often the next day.
Enough said and I guess I will get some flack mentioning "private and paying"!
Final word - see no problem in refusing deferring treatment if an existing health fact would negate or lesson the effectiveness of the operation : but not as a budget cutting exercise.