Home
/
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
/
NHS leader: Stop ‘prioritising’ your own health
NHS leader: Stop ‘prioritising’ your own health
Apr 15, 2026 3:30 AM

A senior official in the UK’s single-payer healthcare system says that patients should stop selfishly putting their own health and well-being first in order to improve the funding and “morale” of the NHS.

Jessica Arnold, who “has held a number of senior roles in the NHS,” argues in the Guardian that the National Health Service would be in fine shape if citizens were willing to suffer in silence until the service can tend to them.

Arnold makes an impassioned plea for Brits to stop using private healthcare, regardless of long wait times, because the private sector drains staff and resources from the NHS.

“I strongly encourage people not to use private healthcare services,” she writes. “I implore anyone who uses private healthcare to be aware that they are effectively privatising the NHS by doing so.”

In a ponderous sentence, she writes: “I ask people to think carefully about the impact of prioritising themselves at a high cost to not only other people who do rely on the NHS, but to their future selves who may rely on the NHS one day because they have an accident or emergency, or e really quite unwell, or can no longer afford to pay privately.” (Emphasis added.)

The es as the NHS announced its worst month in history – for three months in a row, each one worse than the last.

She acknowledges that NHS hospitals send patients to private providers, because they are “struggling to manage the demand and backlog of patients.” Yet she wants the government to rescind this “superficial effort to reduce long waiting lists” and close all the exits for the sake of the NHS’s needs.

Private health services represent a modest share of the UK healthcare sector (approximately 11 percent of all non-urgent cases), less than other European nations with universal healthcare.

“In France, Italy and Austria, countries which one could hardly accuse of an exaggerated faith in free markets and private initiative, the private sector accounts for about one third of the hospital sector,” wroteanalyst Kristian Niemietz of the Institute of Economic Affairs. In Germany and the Netherlands, virtually all hospitals are private.

petition produces to radically different es, Niemietz found:

If the UK’s breast cancer, prostate cancer, lung cancer and bowel cancer patients were treated in the Netherlands rather than on the NHS, more than 9,000 lives would be saved every year. If they were treated in Germany, more than 12,000 lives would be saved, and if they were treated in Belgium, more than 14,000 lives would be saved.

In other words, without private healthcare, people may never get to e “their future selves.”

Yet the Labour Party would like to stamp out even this tiny fragment petition. Shadow Chancellor John McDonnell, a self-described Marxist, has said that as private sector “contracts run out, they should be brought in-house,” or nationalized (which is much what he says about every industry).

The proposal would bring patients greater misery. If politicians eliminate private healthcare, the NHS would have to build 42 new hospitals to care for the influx of trauma and orthopedics patients alone, according to the Independent Healthcare Providers Network. And it would cause the waiting list for these services to triple, from 568,993 to 1,652,785 in three years.

These hospitals would also be inferior due to lack petition. “Hospitals that were exposed to a greater degree petition recorded greater improvements in clinical es, financial es and efficiency measures,” wrote Niemietz.

Even supporters of European welfare states have written guilt-ridden stories about how unresponsive nationalized health systems forced them to turn to private physicians for the sake of their children’s health.

Yet ideologues share Arnold’s belief that Brits should sacrifice themselves for the sake of this government agency. In a 2017 editorial, the Guardian noted that citizens turn to private physicians “rather than face long queues” but insists “private treatment is not the answer.”

“The problem,” it avers, “is money.”

In a sense the paper is right: The problem is fundamental economics. The government promises to meet an unlimited demand (for healthcare) with a limited supply (of doctors) while charging no co-pay. No amount of money can fund infinite demand, so rationing inevitably follows. This leads to long wait times, greater pain and suffering, and thousands of needless deaths.

Putting the state ahead of the well-being of its putative clients is neither restricted to the NHS nor the UK. It infects any government agency whose budget depends on personal choice. Americans see it in the hostility of teachers’ unions to allow students trapped in failing public schools to attend charter schools. One official recently tweeted:

Please don’t encourage removing students from public schools. Instead, you could use your power to encourage parents, students munity members municate their expectations to their local school / school boards.

— ?????? ??????? (@msauroraeverett) January 10, 2020

“The Social Assistance State,” warned Pope John Paul II, creates “public agencies, which are dominated more by bureaucratic ways of thinking than by concern for serving their clients.” It’s difficult to imagine a more bureaucratic mindset than asking people to sacrifice their health – and possibly the lives of their families – for the sake of a government agency.

British voters regard the NHS in nearly religious terms. False gods also demand sacrifices. Moloch demanded that believers sacrifice their own children to him, whereas Yahweh offered His Son for the life of the world.

Arnold’s op-ed offers a stark example that ultimately socialists, democratic or otherwise, unapologetically put their own needs ahead of the lives of their citizens.

Thornley. This photo has been cropped and modified for size. CC BY 2.0.)

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
Commentary: Federal Student Loans as a Problem of Subsidiarity
“When loans are guaranteed by the state and detached from market forces and personal responsibility,” says Dylan Pahman in this week’s Acton Commentary, “those institutions being paid with that loan money experience inflated demand as everyone and anyone now can go and wants to go college. As a result, tuition prices have been inflated. The full text of his essay follows. Subscribe to the free, weekly Acton News & Commentary and other publications here. Federal Student Loans: A Problem of...
5 Lessons Learned from 10 Years at the Acton Institute
Jordan J. Ballor has spent the past decade working for the Acton Institute. At Fieldnotes Magazine he share five lessons he’s learned from working at a think tank focused on the intersection of theology and economics: 1. Treat people like people. The Golden Rule, “do to others what you would have them do to you” (Matt. 7:12), may seem mon sense, but it is much more mon to see what it really should look like in practice. I experienced this...
What You Need to Know About Wilhelm Röpke
Wilhelm Röpke is one of the most important 20th century economists that almost no Americans know anything about. To really learn about the man whose influence was considered largely responsible for enabling Germany’s post-World War II economic “miracle,” you should read Samuel Gregg’s Wilhelm Ropke’s Political Economy. But if you don’t have the time (or $109.25) to spend, you can read Ralph Ancil’s introductory article at Front Porch Republic: Throughout his professional life Röpke was concerned about a socially and...
Quebec Ponders Banning Public Employees From Wearing Overt Religious Symbols
Parti Québécois and Bernard Drainville, minister of the newly proposed charter, announced yesterday that a new plan would ban overt religious symbols to be worn by “judges, police, prosecutors, public daycare workers, teachers, school employees, hospital workers and municipal personnel.” These symbols would include large crosses or crucifixes, turbans, hijab, and kippas. Smaller jewelry (such as Star of David earrings) would be allowed. This proposal has caused uproar, both in the Quebec government and in the public. Here are a...
Callings and the childfree life
I share Fr. Robert Barron’s concern about many of the attitudes on display in this Time magazine cover story on “the childfree life.” As Barron writes, much of the problem stems from the basic American attitude toward a life of “having it all.” Thus, Barron observes, “Whereas in one phase of the feminist movement, ‘having it all’ meant that a woman should be able to both pursue a career and raise a family, now it apparently means a relationship and...
Are Elite Southern College Football Programs Cashing in on Katrina Aid?
At least $8 million will be allocated to fund a new parking garage near David Wade Stadium at Mississippi State University. MSU, which is in Starkville, Miss. and far from the Gulf Coast, is 250 miles from Hurricane Katrina’s landfall. Jeff Amy of the Associated Press has more, Part of a hotel-convention plex planned around a former cotton mill, it’s blocks from Mississippi State’s football stadium. That’s not unlike the condominiums built for University of Alabama football fans in Tuscaloosa...
Was the Sequester ‘Expansionary Austerity’?
Remember the “fiscal cliff”? It wasn’t a cliff. Over at Neighborhood Effects, James Broughel asks the question, “Has the Sequester Hurt the Economy?” So have the sequester cuts hurt the economy? One possible es from a new paper by Scott Sumner of Bentley University. Sumner argues that cuts to government spending don’t have serious deleterious macroeconomic effects when the Federal Reserve is targeting inflation. This is because the Fed ensures that prices stay stable under an inflation targeting regime, which...
Australian PM Tony Abbott: Private Virtue vs. Public Duty
On Saturday, Tony Abbott, a member of the Liberal-National Coalition, was elected prime minister of Australia despite being considered “too religious, too conservative and too blunt” to win a national election. Turns out, he’s an admirer of the work of Acton Research Director Samuel Gregg (Australian born). In 2001, Abbott addressed the role of government in alleviating poverty and reducing unemployment in an issue of Policy Magazine, in a special feature titled, “Against the Prodigal State.” He begins: The story...
Is de Blasio The New Left?
Peter Beinart at the Daily Beast writes a fascinating article about the way the “left” is currently being reshaped. It seems that young adults in the Democratic Party are far more radical than what America saw in the Clinton White House. In fact, as the article notes, Bill de Blasio’s Democratic Party nomination to run for New York City mayor is a signal of this new direction. If those who love liberty are not paying attention to this shift, they...
The End of Anthony Weiner’s Sad and Pathetic Lust for Political Power?
Anthony Weiner did not win the Democratic Party primary for New York City last night. Leading in the polls at one time, he ended up with 5 percent of the vote. His defiant and circus like campaign appropriately ended with more bizarre theatrics. In a scolding interview, Weiner was called out for his political power addiction recently by Lawrence O’Donnell of MSNBC. Though O’Donnell sees no need to call him out for his moral behavior and personally he doesn’t feel...
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2026 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved