Nathaniel Dye poses for a photograph during an interview in London, Tuesday, June 18, 2024. Dye, who was diagnosed with bowel cancer and faced delays in treatment, is hoping the opposition Labour Party will win the July 4 election and fix problems with Britains National Health Service. – Nathaniel Dye believes he probably won’t live to see Britain’s next election.
That is good news for Labour, according to Tim Bale, a professor of politics at Queen Mary University of London. But because the NHS is so much a part of people's daily lives, it is also the most glaring example of how the social contract in Britain is fraying. In March, more than 7.54 million people in England were waiting for elective surgery such as cataract removals or hip replacements, 65% more than before the pandemic.Newspapers are filled with stories of people waiting weeks to get appointments with their family doctors, children being hospitalized for emergency tooth extractions because they weren’t able to get preventive dental care, and patients who spend hours in the back of ambulances waiting for emergency room backups to clear.
The Conservatives say many of the pressures on the NHS are out of their control and have promised to build 50 diagnostic hubs around the country and boost funding by more than inflation during each year of the next government. Labour plans to tackle the backlogs by spending 1 billion pounds to fund 40,000 more operations, scans and appointments each week, while pledging to train thousands of new general practitioners.
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