News RSS Feed


Text banner 2

Treasure Family GPs while you still have them

11:17am Friday 27th June 2008

comment Comments (5)   Have your say »

By Colin Baker »

WHEN I was a lad, the previous generation were always telling us how tough things were when they were young - and how lucky we were to be living in an era where things were getting better every day.

And I have come to the surprising conclusion that they were absolutely right.

I wish I could repeat their message to the generation that is snapping at our heels. But we post-war baby boomers, have really been lucky enough to live our lives during the best of times and I don't envy the inheritors of our not quite so brave new world.

The health service is a very good case in point.

For several decades we have taken for granted that the services of a GP and local access to emergency services, to maternity care and consultant care are, and will continue to be, not only available but free at the point of service.

But we are gradually seeing the erosion of all these services.

Wycombe is a large town and is getting larger. But hospital services are gradually being shifted further away to regional centres and policies are being put in place that one would never have foreseen from a Government that purports to be of the left.

Who would ever have predicted that the party that pioneered the National Health Service would ever even consider introducing competitive market ideology into health care provision?

But we have the situation where some GPs can no longer fill prescriptions for their patients and where there is a move afoot to set up what are being called "polyclinics" or "super-surgeries", run by private companies, where you may never see the same doctor two times in a row. NHS organisations in London already have plans to close 100 GP surgeries to make way for these polyclinics.

And in case you're thinking that this erosion of local healthcare will take time to spread to leafy Buckinghamshire, this week the health magazine Pulse' reported that Branson's Virgin multi-national has been actively discussing plans for mega-surgeries in areas including Birmingham, Peterborough and yes - High Wycombe.

So treasure your family GPs while you have them. Blink and they'll be gone, or beyond your reach, as there won't be any buses to take you to the town they have moved to.

And the local NHS trust will undoubtedly employ an awful lot of people to tell us that we are much better off too.


Your Say YourBucks

M2, says...
2:55am Sat 28 Jun 08

This is insanity..

I can well understand what you mean. Here in the States, the democratic party, which used to care about (well they claimed to, and we believed them, more fool us) increasing access to health care. These days, they are as in bed with the corporate interests. They are doing essentially the same thing here. I lost my husband to a cancer that would have been diagnosed in a more timely manner, had he the specialist he desperately needed (he was critically ill, and needing an organ transplant). Instead he was denied the specialist, and left with little to no access to health care.

I don't know if it's possible, but perhaps people need to start sueing their government leaders.

alouzon, The Forest City says...
9:12pm Sat 28 Jun 08

This has been going on for some time here in Canada. Many people do not have a family doctor, but must rely on walk-in clinics for all their immediate needs. Many have to travel out of the country to obtain lifesaving treatments, and many more cannot afford to. It sounds as if Britain is standing at the top of the same slippery slope Canadian medicare has already started down. Speak to your MP's before it is too late.

WaspPilot, Maryland says...
6:36pm Sun 29 Jun 08

Insanity the world over...

It seems no country is free from health care concerns. I am on the Board of my local Chamber of Commerce, and we have repeatedly implored the Governor - or any politician who enters our orbit - to do something about the state of health care. While the physicians and insurance companies are battling over the last red cent, the patients are left wanting. Due to spiraling insurance costs, there are communities in Maryland without obstretricians, brain surgeons, etc. The emergency room doctors at the local hospital went on strike for a week last year, and would not handle any issue that was not immediately life-threatening - to draw attention to their plight. (This they decided after a meeting held at the local Country Club. No kidding!)

I swore I would never be a single-issue voter. I've changed my mind with the upcoming presidential election. I pray for a puzzlemaster that can unwind the Gordian Knot, and solve the intractable problem of health care!

Milsy, USA says...
12:58pm Mon 30 Jun 08

Speaking as someone who actually works in the health insurance business, I can say at least in the USA things are so so so wrong. I have numerous health problems, took me forever to find a new doctor that I liked to replace the one I had for over 20 years and now my own company insurance is getting out of hand. This company is so big and so greedy that that will not take care of their own. If the economy here didn't suck so much, I'd tell this company what they can do with their job. My so called raise didn't even cover the small increase in my rent this year.

Eirwyn, North Carolina says...
10:01pm Fri 4 Jul 08

I lost my job last year, and I can't afford to have health insurance and pay my monthly bills as well! If you aren't on group insurance, you're really out of luck!
And I have a friend who is working and does have insurance, but still has to pay hundreds of dollars when she goes to have anything done at the dentist or the doctor.
You folks in the UK do NOT want to be like this! It will drain your incomes dry!

Your sayYourBucks

comment Add your comment

Register for a FREE Bucks Free Press account and you can have your say on today's news and sport by adding comments on articles we publish. The best comments may even get published in the paper.

Please register now or sign in below to continue.




Forgotten your password?

Sponsored Links


Local Advertisers


Local Information

Enter your postcode, town or place name

House prices »   Schools »   Crime »   Hospitals »