Home
/
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
/
The NHS and the spell of the White Witch
The NHS and the spell of the White Witch
Apr 26, 2025 6:27 PM

In The Lion, the Witch, and the Wardrobe, C.S. Lewis described the dreary state of Narnia under the curse of the White Witch as “always winter but never Christmas.” His assessment may soon apply to the National Health Service (NHS), whose annually intensifying “winter crisis” threatens to e permanent, according to the UK’s leading doctors’ association.

“The winter crisis has truly been replaced by a year-round crisis,” said Dr. Chaand Nagpaul, chairman of the British Medical Association (BMA).

Each winter, the need for medical care strains the nationalized healthcare infrastructure to the breaking point. This year, the NHS preemptively cancelled all surgeries it deemed “non-urgent,” with some waiting times exceeding 18 weeks; then, it canceled an additional 25,000 surgeries with one day’s notice or less.

Emergency waits lasted longer than ever. The NHS has never met its goal of having 95 percent of patients seen within four hours. (To put that in perspective, the average U.S. wait time is 138 minutes.) But some waits well exceeded UK standards. On 2,010 occasions, patients waited in emergency rooms 12 hours or more in the Royal Cornwall Hospital alone – six-times higher than last year.

The inevitable rationing that panies single-payer health care discriminates against the elderly. “Older people were more likely to face long waits,” Cornwall Live reported. “One in 23 people aged 90 and over (4.4%) waited longer than 12 hours from arrival toadmission, discharge or transfer in 2017/18.” Yet no one under the age of 10 did.

The long waits in A&E rooms came about because NHS hospitals lack sufficient beds. Some 54 of 137 NHS trusts reached 100 percent occupancy. A record 16,900 people were stuck waiting in ambulances during the week between Christmas and New Year’s.

The UK’s health care troubles became so acute that last year the British Red Cross likened NHS service to a “humanitarian crisis.” And winter’s chill still hangs in the air. In April, 20 percent of Welsh emergency patients spent 12 hours or more waiting for treatment – worse than last year.

Only a massive funding increase, the BMA warns, can stave off perpetual winter. A new report from the Institute for Fiscal Studies (IFS) and the Health Foundation puts a dollar figure on that: £2,000 a year from every single home in the UK. Funding would have to increase by three to four percent a year to make even “modest” improvements, the report states.

“Taxes will have to rise” to “historically high levels” (“but not especially high by continental European standards,” the report helpfully notes) to meet current wait time goals. “We will have to pay a lot more,” said IFS Director Paul Johnson – and, he admitted, the burden will fall on the middle class, since the wealthy are “very mobile.”

NHS spending would grow faster than the most optimistic GDP estimates. British families would see one-quarter of all their projected e gains consumed by the NHS tax.

At the same time, the NHS engages in “a ridiculous waste of resources,” according to one health care expert. He specified the practice of “bed-blocking”: Surgeons are idled “daily,” unable to operate because social care does not have beds available for patients who should have already been discharged.

Social care – government health care provided for sick adults, especially the elderly – is also in crisis, according to the IFS, and needs a corresponding funding increase of its own. “If the NHS is to celebrate its 100th birthday, then it’s imperative that adult social care is … given parity with the health service,” said the chair of the Local Government Association’s (LGA) Community Wellbeing Board. The current “sinkhole in funding” is “putting at risk provision of care for a growing number of people of all ages.”

But more funding may only incentivize bad practices. The Centre for Policy Studies(CPS) found that as NHS spending rose, waste increased and productivity fell.“Unless [the funding increase] goes hand in hand with structural improvements to how the NHS is run, we risk betraying patients and taxpayers,” said CPS Director Robert Colvile.

The enormity of the crisis seems lost on no one, except the NHS and certain U.S. religious leaders. Instead of fixing any of these potentially life-threatening ings, the executive director of one NHS Trust spent the Bank Holiday weekend decrying “white privilege.”

Worse yet, some Christians in the U.S. appear to be under the spell of the White Witch. Two weeks ago, liberal denominational leaders launched a new, reimagined version of the Poor People’s Campaign with a call to import something akin to the NHS. Its members wore buttons endorsing Bernie Sanders’ “Medicare for All,” and the campaign’s “Moral Agenda” endorses “universal healthcare” (as well as abortion-on-demand). The man who delivered the homily at the royal wedding, Bishop Michael Curry of the Episcopal Church, has attempted to portray the campaign as a clear outworking of the Gospels – proclaiming it a “Jesus Movement” and a “Pentecost Movement.”

But Jesus never told His followers to petition the State for their medical needs (or anything else): He gave a far more demanding responsibility to provide for the needs of others personally. We must care for others even if, like the widow, it requires giving our last two mites. It is fair to say that Jesus would look askance at giving Caesar, Herod, or Pontius Pilate more power over life-and-death decisions. And Christian prudence would reject any system with the manifest, systemic failures of the NHS.

Lifting the veil of winter and making death itself “start working backward” will require a deeper magic than tax increases and government centralization.

Mabbett. This photo has been cropped. CC BY-SA 3.0.)

Comments
Welcome to mreligion comments! Please keep conversations courteous and on-topic. To fosterproductive and respectful conversations, you may see comments from our Community Managers.
Sign up to post
Sort by
Show More Comments
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
Transforming Lives in Nashville
NASHVILLE – The event was billed as an “appreciation” for the volunteers at the Christian Women’s Job Corps of Middle Tennessee and the theme for the evening was set by St. Paul’s Epistle to the Galatians: Let us not e weary in doing good, for at the proper time we will reap a harvest if we do not give up (Gal. 6:9). By the time the program wrapped up, everyone in attendance was reminded of the plain truth that making...
Power
Zenit published the following this weekend, mentary by Capuchin Father Raniero Cantalamessa on this Sunday’s liturgical readings (Isaiah 53:2a.,3a.,10-11; Hebrews 4:14-16; Mark 10:35-45). Well worth the read. After the Gospel on riches, this Sunday’s Gospel gives us Christ’s judgment on another of the great idols of the world: power. Power, like money, is not intrinsically evil. God describes himself as “the Omnipotent” and Scripture says “power belongs to God” (Psalm 62:11). However, given that man had abused the power granted...
Faithfulness in Biblical Interpretation
I ran across the following quote from Søren Kierkegaard recently (HT: the evangelical outpost): The matter is quite simple. The Bible is very easy to understand. But we Christians are a bunch of scheming swindlers. We pretend to be unable to understand it because we know very well that the minute we understand we are obliged to act accordingly. Take any words in the New Testament and forget everything except pledging yourself to act accordingly. My God, you will say,...
Capitalism and the Common Good: The Ten Pillars of the Moral Economy
Sirico: No moral conflicts with rooting for the Tigers On Friday afternoon, Rev. Robert A. Sirico addressed an audience of Acton Supporters at the Detroit Athletic Club in Detroit, Michigan. His address was titled Capitalism and the Common Good: The Ten Pillars of the Moral Economy, and we are pleased to make it available to you here (10.5 mb mp3 file). I would be remiss if I failed to note that the event took place on the eve of the...
From Edwards to Darwin, Abraham to Jesus
Two quick items: First, in unrelated projects, the works of Jonathan Edwards (HT: Reformation21) and Charles Darwin (HT: Slashdot) are set to be digitized and accessible online. Looks like the Darwin set plete, and the Edwards works are in public beta, with only the Miscellanies and sermons available as yet. And second, I’m headed to the exhibit, “From Abraham to Jesus,” tonight, called “the largest touring exhibit of sacred text, biblical art, and artifacts in history.” The tour opens in...
Moyers/Beisner/Akin Kerfuffle
As noted here, last week PBS ran a special by Bill Moyers’, “Is God Green?” examining the “new” trend among evangelicals toward stewardship of the environment. Arguably what is “new” about this move is its coherence with liberal/leftist environmentalism. As also noted previously, “The munity for 5,000 years or more has taken its responsibility for the environment seriously. The whole concept of ‘stewardship’ is one es directly from sacred texts.” Stewardship isn’t new. Perhaps the method for stewardship proposed is....
Stossel and Symmetric Information
Jim Aune, blogger-in-chief at The plained yesterday about his health care treatment. He says, “I have been in constant pain for 36 hours. I actually used a cane to go to the office yesterday for some meetings. The problem? I have a trapped nerve in my abdomen from a double hernia repair a year ago. I got shot up with steroids about 3 weeks ago, and that worked for about 5 days, but I still can’t walk without a ripping...
Beisner Responds
In the latest Interfaith Stewardship Alliance newsletter, dated Oct. 21, Cal Beisner passes along his response to the letters sent by Bill Moyers’ legal counsel (background on the matter with related links here). Here’s what Beisner says as related through his own counsel: Your letter of October 18, 2006, to Interfaith Stewardship Alliance and your letter of October 19, 2006, to Dr. E. Calvin Beisner have been sent to me by my clients for reply. I have carefully examined the...
The Catholicity of the Reformation: Musings on Reason, Will, and Natural Law, Part 4
As promised in Part 3, this post will begin a discussion of natural law in the thought of the Reformer Peter Martyr Vermigli (1499-1562), but first I want to touch on the broader issue of natural law in the context of Reformation theology. More than any other Reformer, John Calvin is appealed to for his insight on natural law. This is probably due to the stubborn persistence among scholars to single him out as the chief early codifier of Protestant...
Not as Sick as You Think
In a column yesterday, George Will coined a term that deserves widespread use: economic hypochondria. He criticizes the way in which the media—and many of us, even though relatively “healthy,” financially—pounce on every bit of news that might be interpreted as indicating economic hardship. Will’s column has a certain partisan bent to it, but one needn’t be a Republican to see the larger point. As liberal writer Gregg Easterbrook observed in The Progress Paradox, even the poorest Americans enjoy a...
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2025 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved