13,000 died needlessly at 14 worst UK healthcare facilities

Obama Care Too OldFrom the UKTelegraph.com:

The needless deaths of thousands of NHS patients will be exposed in a report this week.

Thirteen THOUSAND citizens.

Prof Sir Bruce Keogh will describe how each hospital let its patients down badly through poor care, medical errors and failures of management, and will show that the scandal of Stafford Hospital, where up to 1,200 patients died needlessly, was not a one-off.

The report will also pile pressure on Labour over its handling of the NHS, with the Conservatives likely to seize on it to attack Andy Burnham, the shadow health secretary who was in charge of the NHS in England from June 2009 until May 2010.

This is, oddly enough, the same national healthcare system that was touted as so incredibly wonderful by those Leftists who swooned at the thought of its carbon copy being installed in the United States of America via ObakaKare.

But hey, no problem, thirteen-thousand persons killed [ In a medical system designed to save lives. – BZ ] via “alarming levels of infections, patients suffering from neglect and appalling blunders such as surgery performed on the wrong parts of bodies.”

Thank goodness there weren’t any really significant problems.

That ObakaKare, boy-o-boy. I simply cannot wait for the blivit to ensue.

National health care.  You want it?  You got it.

BZ

P.S.
Read this story by Cal Thomas for insight into the failure of UK’s socialized medicine.

But wait; maybe there is a true reason for socialized medicine: to significantly reduce the number of persons on the planet in order to enable Agenda 21.  In which case, NHS and ObakaKare are quite brilliant in their origins.

Article: “The impact of unacceptable wait time on health care patients’ attitudes and actions.”

Article: “How long do Canadians wait for health care?”

 

 

If you enjoyed this post, make sure you subscribe to my RSS feed!

3 thoughts on “13,000 died needlessly at 14 worst UK healthcare facilities

  1. Does the “European” models appeal to intelligent people who lack the guts to compete? Power without responsibility and accountability has a certain appeal. Just the type I don’t want calling the shots in my declining years.

Comments are closed.