Maremia
Dickens, are you following the events in the USA? How much of medicare/medicaid will survive Trump's big bill?
According to Forbes...
“There will be NO CUTS to Social Security, Medicare, or Medicaid,” Trump wrote Monday on Truth Social, claiming ^“the only ‘cutting’ we will do is for Waste, Fraud, and Abuse,” repeating the GOP’s narrative that the “One Big, Beautiful Bill Act” won’t directly reduce Medicaid spending—despite an estimate from the Congressional Budget Office that changes to the Medicaid program will ultimately leave more than 7.6 million people without benefits over the next 10 years.
Obviously the GOP and the Congressional BO disagree. Fraud is one thing - who decides tho' what is 'waste' or 'abuse'?
And, surely, there are in-built checks to counter fraud and abuse already?
67% of people in the States who file for bancruptcy say medical bills are the reason.
The American friend I mentioned above originally had a thriving business and a family home. And a comprehensive healthcare plan for the whole family.
Unfortunately, his son carried the bowel cancer gene, and his wife (my friend's wife) was later diagnosed with breast cancer.
I got to know my friend's wife (online) after he died from bowel cancer. The son (late teens) also died. The family were bankrupted, the business lost, and their home, too. The wife and remainder of the family ended up living in a small rented property paid for by local charity. And they were still lumbered with some medical bills.
If Farage is envisioning the American model of healthcare - is his antipathy to the EU so intense that he wouldn't consider the European model (?) - then I hope he gets hoist by his own petard eventually.
Private healthcare is fine if you have, for example, a simple sports injury, or similar, that requires a short-term / simple procedure or op, but for complex medical cases, it really isn't.
.. and, I've mentioned this before when the forum has discussed this issue - a friend of mine underwent a complicated and somewhat risky bowel surgery under the knife of an NHS surgeon, successfully. When she mused with the surgeon how this operation would've panned out under private healthcare, he told her that she probably would not have been offered it - apparently American surgeons often protect their reputation by refusing to do such risky surgery.
Food for thought, eh?