Hi everyone,
Here is a CNN article about the NHS in the UK, including Trump's views on it.
https://edition.cnn.com/2018/02/10/health/uk-nhs-universal-health-coverage-crisis-point-intl/index.html**********
"Thousands of people are marching in the UK because their U(niversal) system is going broke and not working," President Donald Trump tweeted of the thousands who demonstrated February 3 for more money to finance the service.
British Health Secretary Jeremy Hunt soon fought back, defending the system whose budget he determines and tweeting that 28 million people in the United States "have no cover."
Prime Minister Theresa May responded that she was proud of Britain's health service.
Compared with the complexities of obtaining and being eligible for insurance, the idea of a national health service is indeed simple -- to its users. For those financing it, not so much.
NHS funding is one of the most hotly contested issues in British politics, with all parties wanting to know how to maintain universal access to care at a time of rising costs and demand. The system seems to be splitting at its seams. Is it broken?
......, the UK is one of the lowest health care spenders among developed G7 countries. The US government and its citizens spent 17.2% of GDP on health care in 2017.
But this winter, thousands of non-emergency procedures were canceled and a strained system was put in the spotlight amid a flu outbreak that pushed the health service to its limit. Despite planning for a surge in cases, routine procedures were canceled to free up beds, yet emergency rooms were still overwhelmed with tens of thousands of people each day.
In January alone, 2 million people went to emergency rooms in England, with more than a quarter of them admitted, and 15% of them waited longer than four hours to be seen. The NHS goal is for under 5% of people to wait longer than four hours.
Patients are dying in hallways while they wait for beds, senior emergency room doctors told CNN in an earlier report.
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Cheers.
Sriram