How are UK doctors paid?
Posted , 4 users are following.
I'm pretty new to this UK board but I know others from the US are around too.
Our health care systems are totally opposite and I see the good and not so good in both systems.....but have to take into account our 300+million population and the UK 56+milllion.
I know how US doctors make a living but wonder about the UK doctors.... Thanks ....Joy 76 US
2 likes, 30 replies
georgeGG joy47826
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it is something like that. A doctor, if thereis one on the forum would give you a better answer. George
EileenH joy47826
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All doctors working within the hospital sector of the NHS receive a salary - just like any other member of NHS staff - and there are set pay scales for the various grades.
General practice is a bit different and there are two forms of remuneration there. Some GPs set up and run a practice (office to you) in a similar way to the USA. Some may share the costs with another "share holder". They then receive funding from the government to take NHS patients - their services are "purchased". Out of that "salary" they have to pay the costs of running the practice: the building, other staff they employ and so on. They can also employ doctors within that set up and these doctors receive a fixed salary and have no responsibility for the costs of running the practice.
The GPs are also reimbursed in relation to the patients they care for: a fixed amount is paid per head for patients in various age groups to cover the costs associated with providing the service. This is paid irrespective of whether a patient registered on the practice list goes to the doctor multiple times per year or never crosses the threshold. Every person in the UK is entitled to be registered with a practice although in some places there is no choice as to which practice. Where there IS a choice you make that decision and register with the practice of your choice - usually it has to be one within a reasonable distance of your home and you can only normally register with one practice and that is the practice that is paid to provide your care. It is possible to change practice however if you prefer to go to another and they will accept you.
There are also walk-in clinics and minor injuries units you may go to without being registered there for care.
Hospitals also receive funding on a similar basis depending onthe number of beds and the services offered. A hospital providing transplantation or cancer care (for example) will receive some extra to cover the immense costs there for example but otherwise they must budget to cover all costs incurred.
In order to access specialist care you must be referred by a GP. Almost all specialists work within hospitals both for out-patient and in-patient care.
There are also doctors who work privately, some of them work in the NHS and also see private patients. Sometimes you can see a doctor privately and he will then transfer your care to his NHS list where the care does not cost you at point if receipt. Some doctors work purely privately - in exactly the same way as the USA.
There are downsides to the NHS obviously - there isn't a bottomless pot of money. But no one who is ill is left with no cover - if you are employed you and your employer pay contributions to the social services fund. If you become unemployed you are caught by the social services net as you are credited as having paid contributions when you register as unemployed. This covers far more than just medical care though - entitlement to medical care is based on residency. If you are resident in the UK, then you are entitled to care whether you work or not. There are some things that aren't available on the NHS but basically all emergency care needed is covered - from cancer care to accident trauma. And the unemployed down and out is entitled to the same care on the NHS as the company director who chooses to use the NHS on principle. There is no rationing policy because you come under "medicaid". If you need treatment you get it without question - with a few exceptions for very expensive drugs that are only partly funded and special permission is required for the funding. But if you need a drug or an operation or other therapy you get it immediately as required - no contacting the insurance companyfirst to get approval.
Anyone who has the money can opt for private care which they can pay for themselves or they can take out a private health insurance plan. So if you want that - it is no different from the USA. The people with money can have the frills, everyone else gets outstanding care - free at point of service. You can have doctors who are not very good in some way or another - but that can happen in the USA or any other private system too. And we can ask for a second opinion - at no extra cost to us.
There are flaws but generally the NHS is seen as one of the best health services in the world - both in what they offer and also in obtaining value for money.
I, by the way, don't live in the UK now. The system here is similar, just much smaller.
georgeGG EileenH
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tiswas24537 joy47826
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they are salaried but have bonuses as well. i dont think your ever see them at a food bank .haha
georgeGG tiswas24537
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But they are worth their hire? George
tiswas24537 georgeGG
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most i wouldnt give house room .
specialist and surgeons are great at putting people together after accidents and specialist come up with some amazing ways of helping people like the panorama programme i was watching on growing a whole new nervous system from cells stored in the base of the brain used for the sense of smell
, it was a fascinating programme and i know that these people dedicate there lives to finding answers .
but the general practioner no ,you cant do anything for a patceint in 6mins the whole system needs overhauling people are being misdiognosed and ignored and fobbed of to much by gps . lets face it if you employ an electrican you dont expect him to ask you whats wrong .thats his job .
EileenH tiswas24537
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You wouldn't call an electrician, hand him the door keys and leave him to find out what was wrong for himself would you? You would at least tell him the light in the bathroom wasn't coming on or whatever.
georgeGG tiswas24537
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On the other hand a surgical team saved my life decades ago. More recently hospital staff saved my wife's life. Hospital staff also saved the life of my wife when she had meningitis and that of my youngest boy when years earlier he had also had meningitis.
It seem in this sorry world we have to take the rough with the smooth and thanks to the NHS the price is the same for both - in contribution and tax terms..In personal terms? We each have to judge.
georgeGG EileenH
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But I should not put words into your mouths. You are so well able to speak for yourselves. I look forward to your further comments.
tiswas24537 georgeGG
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joy47826 georgeGG
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Here many are on the payroll of pharma companies in many ways, won't go into all I've seen and hear.....
Many are life savers and I'm thankful and many have destroyed lives...
That is WHY people need to take charge so much of their lives....I have been doing that for some 25 yrs and avoid doctors a LOT....see mine once a year for a check in and annual labs and then there is the hip replacement misery I went thru in 2010....won't go there here, that is why I arrived here due to hip replacement and wanting to hear other's stories.... Joy
PS: Before pycnogenol in 1995, I was a mess with allergies and sinus and drugs that did NOTHING....nor did the allergist I saw for a couple yrs.....so I speak from my experiences.
georgeGG tiswas24537
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My present GP, turns in her chair and looks intently at me. That scrutiny builds my confidence hugely in her ability.
tiswas24537
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i only go once or twice a year for bloods this year i went i had hardly sat down i felt he was getting ready to show me the door .the first thing he mentioned was my weight , i said its not what i eat and it really isent its because i need to be more active ,but fatigue restricts so much .
i got up and walked out in desgust i am not there every week moaning on about thia that, i deal with the pain myself and try to manage the fatigue, and the first thing is not how are you its what you doing about my wait ,
funny how when they stuff people full of steriods which them hughe they dont think thats a health risk .
tiswas24537 georgeGG
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untill his toes turned black then he was rushed in and once again the surgeon skill saved his leg. from a gaggaling that had grown up his calf muscle restricting blood supply he lost most of his calf muscle but not his leg . but gp and hospital care should not be a lottery .i hope you agree .
tiswas24537 EileenH
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when a man of 39 dies of throat cancer after being diognosed with acid reflux theres something wrong. try telling his widow and sons your sorry you got it wrong .
tiswas24537
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when i was a kid and a teenager our doctors surgery was an old big house they had a morning surgery and an evening one you didnt have to ring for an appointment you turned up in the opening hours checked in at reception and waited your turn
, doors were shut at end of surgery hours .but if your were in you were seen if you needed 5mins you got 5 if you needed more you got more the,doctors came out on morning and evening calls , it worked fine . so why did they change it . ?
joy47826 tiswas24537
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Since I have Medicare which we are entitled to in the US at 65, some chiros still take Medicare and some have opted out....they just feel they don't make ENOUGH money with their Medicare patients....
Well, this lady spent 1 hr with me and I paid a $10 copay, she muscle tested some supplements I took in and we talked about my OA mess and hip replacement...and she did ultra sound on knee and some very light activator work on shoulders and foot....
She will end up with about $50 for this work after all is said and done when Medicare pays her....
I will go in every other week for ultra sound work and some light body work....the trauma of surgery plays havoc on the body.
So there are docs, chiros who are not that money driven. Joy
EileenH tiswas24537
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But the original question was about how UK medicine is funded - and however you want to look at it, in the USA (and other countries too) people die of simple problems because they don't have the money to even go to the doctor and get an antibiotic. That is NEVER a reason in the UK.
tiswas24537 EileenH
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luckly it did go on its own accord. with no help from the doctors
georgeGG tiswas24537
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Yes, we should not be in a life and death lottery, our own life or death. I take the view that I am the sole executive medic. All the professionals are advisors. They do not like it. I do not like it either,
George
georgeGG tiswas24537
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georgeGG EileenH
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joy47826 georgeGG
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We have walk in clinics when a person can't get to a doctor.....
My daughter and her child just used a walk in since they couldn't get to their doc, this was a Sunday.....clinic did an xray of child's chest, and she walked out with an antiobiotic....she had a lingering cough for too long and for all that care, it was $90....small price for immediate attention.
Again, I'm very much against our continuing wars and sadly it will probably never end here.....weapons makers make huge profits...
georgeGG joy47826
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Good morning. I am sorry to hurt you. That is the trouble with comparisons. It is only one camparitor we have been thinking of. The divided opinions over Obamacare show up another comparitor. Big and little government. A large body of opion is against Obamacare, not because they do not care for their neighbour but because they object to big government forcing them to buy health insurance. In UK we have huge government and many dislike it. Yet generally they like the NHS, a child of huge government. The American seems to value personal freedom more than the Brit. On this comparison the USA looks to be the winner.
What you say of the USA as a world policeman strikes a chord. You get no thanks for your effort. Colonial Britain was in a similar position Peoples do not like being managed by other people, even if there are some good results. They would rather have their own "bad" government than someone elses "good" government. I expect you were rather surprised at Scotland's YES/NO fuss. A very extreme example with advantage and disadvantage being very narrowly construed.
Please forgive my clumsy handling of the debate. I really had not intended to run down your country, especially when you are a welcome visitor to the UK..
A contrite George
joy47826 georgeGG
Posted
Our current president seems to be a peace maker but he continues with the wars that have been going on forever....so much pressure from the money dealers......
I just heard Russell Brand on my morning radio, Democracy Now, and a man after my own heart.....he says he has never voted and gave his reasons....our country just spent over $3Billion for recent elections and the conservatives came out with some winners......MORE will definitely VOTE in the 2016 presidential elections.....another bunch of billions spent.....
Such a waste...big money controls....joy
georgeGG joy47826
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tiswas24537 joy47826
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i thought what a waste his realy inteligent man and we could do with him and some more like him in parliment . as long as there is gread in the world there never be peace .
joy47826 tiswas24537
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georgeGG joy47826
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tiswas24537 joy47826
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