Brexitlandia - L'Inghilterra post Brexit

Ogni dettagli nuovo che leggo in questo grafico è sempre meglio :rotfl:

https://twitter.com/LukeTryl/status/1686370740747317250

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ma come just stop oil force for bad ’ _ ’

stonewall mi stupisco non la conosca nessuno :asd:

…niente letto male

Sondaggisti codardi, inserite la Casa Reale di Windsor tra le opzioni scrutinate.

Il 3% che non sa cos’è la China invece. :asd:

devono essere gli stessi che non sanno USA e la Russia :asd:

Dovrebbe far pensare a queste persone che il modo in cui stanno promuovendo il loro messaggio non sta funzionando, anzi, spesso ottiene L effetto opposto.

ma si, ma son quelli che non vogliono fare il sondaggio e rispondono “non lo so” a tutto

Ero indeciso se metterlo qua o nel thread TGCOM :asd:

campionati di nuoto nella merda?

Un altro Brexit benefit.

Non mi ricordo se Sunderland aveva votato Leave o Remain. Il Karma signori, il Karma vi dico!

EDIT

82,394 for Leave to 51,930 for Remain - a majority of 61%
Bene, che affoghino nella loro merda

Praticamente ti dice qual e’ l’incertezza del sondaggio.

Tanto per aggiungere merda al fuoco:

Faccio notare che sempre grazie ai bellissimi media inglesi, il COVID ormai era “passato” da boh, un anno o giu’ di li. Tipo ne sentivi parlare qualcuno in radio pure e l’host era sempre a minimizzare “vabbe’ tieniti coperto e riguardati”.

In TV o News neanche c’e’ accenno ovviamente e il governo ha altre priorita’, tipo i terribili trans.

Oh beh, il COVID-19 come tematica sociale è da tempo concluso, non otterresti risposte istituzionali neppure se emergesse una variante con l’epidemicità della Peste Nera, forse solamente quando il numero dei cadaveri fosse tale da rallentare la circolazione degli autocarri.

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Centene svende tutte le cliniche perché non riesce a fare i soldi che vorrebbe con la salute della gente

https://archive.li/cHzzB

Aggiungo un commento esemplare da tildes.net che spiega bene come funziona la sanità in UK e offre uno spaccato del problema (non sostituisce leggersi l’articolo, lo integra). Sono da telefono, dopo formatto meglio in caso


The bureaucratic side of health care in England is complex.

Government takes money from general taxation and gives it to NHS England. NHS England uses some of that money for highly specialised services where it makes sense to have a small number of national centres, and gives most of the rest of that money to regional bodies called Integrated Care Boards (which are part of Integrated Care Systems). The ICBs commission health care services for their regions. Services are commissioned through a competitive tender system. Any organisation can apply to provide a healthcare service. The provider organisations are usually NHS organisations (NHS Trusts or NHS Foundation Trusts), but they don’t have to be, and commissioners are (I think) legally forbidden from having a preference for NHS provision over private provision. We do have a few private providers of NHS funded services. Some examples might be Cygnet Group who run some mental health hospitals.

The other large group of private provision of NHS services are GPs. Strictly speaking, GPs are independent contractors, set up to deliver almost only NHS services, commissioned solely by the NHS.

If you’re a GP you might form a “GP Surgery” with 4 or 5 other doctors. This gives you some economies of scale. For example, you can employ practice nurses and a practice manager. If you’re a GP surgery you might want to club together with some other GP surgeries so you can buy a building and call it a health centre, and have say 4 different GP surgery businesses (each providing 4 to 5 GPs) running from the building. You’d be able to have a room for phlebotomists to do all the blood draws.

Centene felt that GPs entered the profession because they wanted to do doctoring, not because they wanted to be small business owners, and that if there was one large organisation doing the business stuff it could take over GP surgeries and get some kind of return on its investment. So they set up Operose Health and bought out a load of GP surgeries.

One of the advantages to me of Operose

At the moment everyone in England has access to free GP care. GPs can ask for ID, but they must register you even if you can’t provide it. Unfortunately, many GPs don’t know this. One of the things I was doing before pandemic was to gently remind GPs that they’ve misunderstood their contracting arrangements and ask them to make changes to their website. When a town has 27 independent GPs this is tricky but achievable. When it has one large provider like Operose it’s much easier. I found Operose were always receptive when I spoke to them, and were keen to do the right thing.

What went wrong?

The twin disposals signal an abandonment of Centene’s UK strategy, which was meant to create a seamless pathway to private healthcare by buying up taxpayer-funded GP services and encouraging doctors to refer patients to its chain of 53 Circle/BMI hospitals in England, those people said.

This was not going to work. If I go to the doctor and they say “have you thought about going private?” I’d say “I’ve paid my taxes, where’s my service?” and then “no, I’ve got no money”. A lot of people making use of GP services are in similar situations. They have a complex interplay of poor health and low finances. Trying to upsell expensive healthcare to poor “customers” is dumb.

It also feels like a massive conflict of interest.

Centene’s purchase of Operose GP surgeries in 2021 faced court challenges by anti-privatisation campaigners. Although their case was not upheld, activists viewed the purchase as a sign of the increasing privatisation of the NHS.

The court case was mostly dumb. Here’s the ruling: Khurana v North Central London Clinical Commissioning Group & Anor [2022] EWHC 384 (Admin) (23 February 2022)

People were concerned about the private ownership of NHS GPs, but GPs have always been independent contractors, they’ve always owned those businesses. The bad thing that was happening was pushing NHS patients toward private provision: this is clearly unethical. The NHS is very popular, and there are a lot of campaigning groups set up around the NHS. But lots of them appear to know very little about how the NHS actually works. It’s a bit frustrating.

Anyway, Centene leaving the UK market is Yet Another Example of private providers having a go at running NHS services but not being able to do it for the NHS money that’s offered. At some point government will have to face the fact that we’re going to have to raise taxes to pay for all the stuff that we’ve run into the ground over the past 10 years.

source: Centene to sell GP clinics and hospitals in exit from UK market - ~health - Tildes

Ho la vaga impressione vi sia o vi possa eventualmente essere una qualche riedizione nel settore sanitario di quanto avvenne tra i distributori di energia elettrica durante l’ultimo picco dei prezzi di mercato del Gas Naturale, in questo caso mi pare l’azienda stia decisamente affondando verso un livello di mercato più consono dopo essere stati ricoperti di denaro facilissimo prima nell’epoca della crescita sugli alberi e poi dalla fase dell’epidemia cercando conseguentemente di tagliare le ridondanze improduttive.

wtf :asd:

Sí, si sprecano i commenti come quando hanno annunciato il Nord Irlanda sia in UK che in EU…

Non ho sentito l’intervista, ma va detto che oggi questa che in teoria era una bella notizia per gonfiarsi il petto (tra i Tories ovviamente) è stata oscurata dal fatto che ci sia un detenuto per spionaggio fuggito da un carcere di Londra, e che un ex deputato Tory è stato invitato, dai vertici del partito, a levarsi dal cazzo, udite udite, PER AIUTARE IL PRIMO MINISTRO (in sto momento di merda).

Il motivo è che ha perso un ricorso contro un provvedimento di sospensione di otto settimane per aver palpato due uomini in un Club.

Altra By-election e altro calcio nelle palle dei Tories con i Doc Martens punta metallica.