Posted on 6th February by Rachel Clarke
The Independent
Distraction in healthcare can be a blessing in disguise.
As a patient, I have appreciated a kind word, a hand held just as the needle
goes in, the dressing is ripped off, the unavoidable pain caused. And as a
doctor, how much do I strive to soothe and detract from the unpleasantness I
must sometimes inflict on those in my care.
But in health politics, distraction is anything but
benign. As the NHS quietly implodes around us, Downing Street’s media tactics
exhibit a disturbing trend. Just like her special friend across the pond,
Theresa May has fully embraced the power of migrant-bashing to divert attention
away from inconvenient news. Those NHS disasters you’ve been hearing so much
about – the patients dying in corridors or waiting years for surgeries – that’s
right, it’s those filthy foreigners to blame. You know, the migrants clogging
up the system, pinching all the GP slots and essentially stealing all of our
precious NHS cash. Anyone would think it
was time to seal ourselves within a great big British wall.
The Government has conveniently timed their latest volley
against immigrants to cleanse the front pages of the devastating news that a
staggering one in six A&E departments are set to be closed or downgraded in
the next four years – a direct consequence of Downing Street’s decision to
impose £22bn of cuts upon the NHS by 2020. Instead, today’s headlines are
screaming about Jeremy Hunt’s new law to force hospitals to deny non-emergency
treatment to any “foreign patient” who cannot produce identity documents proving
their right to free care.
NHS staff, we are told, will even be issued with credit
card readers to take payments at hospital bedsides before any treatment can
commence.
As an NHS doctor, I have news for Theresa May. At the
bedside, I am my patient’s advocate, neither a tax collector nor a conscripted
border guard. My first duty as a doctor is to my patients – not her Trumpist
demagoguery – and I will continue to treat according to need and only need, as
opposed to country of birth.
As Theresa May is, of course, fully aware, it is her
Government’s cost-cutting agenda, not migrants, that imperils our NHS. To
inject some facts into Downing Street’s grubby post-truth narrative, so-called
health tourism is responsible for a mere 0.3 per cent of NHS spending. The NHS
loses more money on missed GP appointments and spends more on stationery. Yet
the political choice to impose £22bn of “efficiency savings” is decimating our
ability to provide safe, reliable care to our patients. Whipping up
anti-immigrant feeling to divert attention from the crisis state of our NHS is
like accusing “bad hombres” and Muslims of ruining America – this is cynical,
sinister stuff.
Doctors like me fear that this ill-conceived policy will
deter some of the very patients who are most in need from seeking healthcare –
poor, vulnerable, perhaps unable to speak English, and terrified that a trip to
hospital may descend into an interrogation about entitlement to stay. To me,
that is the antithesis of the values underpinning our
NHS. I suppose the prospect of an NHS-wide network of
bedside chip and pin machines may prove irresistibly seductive to those in
government eager to steer NHS funding away from general taxation towards
private revenue streams. But using migrant bashing to achieve this? Britain is
better than this.
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