Deleted
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Post by Deleted on May 26, 2019 7:28:57 GMT
Thin end of the wedge? Priory has paid out £171 million in interest to its owners Acadia Healthcare in the two years since the US company bought it. Could this be why Gove and Fox and Farage and Banks and all the rest want closer ties to the USA? link
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Post by perrykneeham on May 26, 2019 7:41:28 GMT
In what way? Private provision has always existed.
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Post by reverend on May 26, 2019 8:14:10 GMT
Baffled by what this has to do with the NHS?
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Post by flatandy on May 26, 2019 12:59:40 GMT
I believe he's illustrating the consequences of removing care from the NHS and moving it into the private sector, either through outsourcing NHS work, or through underfunding the NHS and forcing people to take private care.
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Post by Deleted on May 26, 2019 13:26:23 GMT
Thank you. Jeez it's hard work here sometimes. They don't even absorb the title.
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Post by perrykneeham on Jul 8, 2019 8:10:56 GMT
More NHS scum, raping the system. " Waiting lists for routine surgery have risen by up to 50% in England because senior doctors say they cannot afford to work extra shifts. Consultants have begun refusing to work beyond their planned hours after receiving unexpected tax bills, following new pension rules in 2016. NHS hospitals said delays are becoming increasingly routine as a result. The Department of Health said it aimed to solve the problem with more flexible pensions. Consultants who earn more than £110,000 a year faced new limits on how much they could contribute to their pension from 2016. Complex rules mean the charges can be unpredictable if they go over the allowance. But those near the threshold have have few options to avoid the impact, other than reducing their hours, quitting the NHS pension scheme or taking early retirement." www.bbc.co.uk/news/health-48903913Waaaaah! We're making too much money! Shameless.
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Post by hammerhead on Jul 8, 2019 8:29:59 GMT
If you were losing money for working extra hours, wouldn't you simply not work them?
Seems somewhat ridiculous to do anything else.
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Post by perrykneeham on Jul 8, 2019 8:37:45 GMT
Nope. They're hardly losing money, are they?
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mids
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Post by mids on Jul 8, 2019 9:30:31 GMT
They're whining about paying tax despite earning several times the national average. Typical remainer/BBC scum.
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moggyonspeed
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"Anyone who considers protocol unimportant has never dealt with a cat."
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Post by moggyonspeed on Jul 8, 2019 9:54:30 GMT
Nice bit of conflation there, mate.
But yeah, an NHS Consultant sank the Titanic, the Mongol Horde was largely made up of NHS Consultants, and at The Crucifixion an NHS Consultant was heard to say, “Cross yer legs mate - I’ve only got one nail left”.
Wazzock.
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Post by Minge är en jävla besserwisser on Jul 8, 2019 10:06:34 GMT
If you were losing money for working extra hours, wouldn't you simply not work them? Seems somewhat ridiculous to do anything else. They aren't. They just have to opt out of the pesnsion scheme. The tax arises because of the massive benefit of the pension scheme and the overfunding by earning more. Opt out and no tax bill.
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Post by Repat Van on Jul 8, 2019 11:52:00 GMT
More NHS scum, raping the system. " Waiting lists for routine surgery have risen by up to 50% in England because senior doctors say they cannot afford to work extra shifts. Consultants have begun refusing to work beyond their planned hours after receiving unexpected tax bills, following new pension rules in 2016. NHS hospitals said delays are becoming increasingly routine as a result. The Department of Health said it aimed to solve the problem with more flexible pensions. Consultants who earn more than £110,000 a year faced new limits on how much they could contribute to their pension from 2016. Complex rules mean the charges can be unpredictable if they go over the allowance. But those near the threshold have have few options to avoid the impact, other than reducing their hours, quitting the NHS pension scheme or taking early retirement." www.bbc.co.uk/news/health-48903913Waaaaah! We're making too much money! Shameless. I don’t get why those who allow themselves to be shafted are annoyed at those who don’t. Good on them for valuing life outside of work and making choices that make financial sense.
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Post by Repat Van on Jul 8, 2019 11:54:19 GMT
Nope. They're hardly losing money, are they? “Consultants who earn more than £110,000 a year faced new limits on how much they could contribute to their pension from 2016. Complex rules mean the charges can be unpredictable if they go over the allowance.” Seems like they feel it will make less financial sense (as far as pensions contribution and undoubtedly tax payments go) to work more hours. Which seems entirely sensible. They will just have to recruit more doctors to cover the shortfall in hours.
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Post by perrykneeham on Jul 8, 2019 12:06:20 GMT
So, not losing money.
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Deleted
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Post by Deleted on Jul 8, 2019 12:14:09 GMT
Hahaha... oh the ways of human nature. Stench of jealousy in that lead post or what? (with a pro-Brexit jibe neatly shoe-horned in by his main toady a couple of posts later).
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Post by perrykneeham on Jul 8, 2019 12:23:41 GMT
The lead post was yours. Gimp.
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Deleted
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Post by Deleted on Jul 8, 2019 12:26:10 GMT
Hahaha... Gimp indeed. It's the heat. But you know I meant your lead post today... over.
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Deleted
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Post by Deleted on Jul 8, 2019 12:27:05 GMT
And I'm laughing too much. Must get a grip..
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Post by Repat Van on Jul 8, 2019 12:36:09 GMT
It’s financially less beneficial for them to do extra shifts. So they won’t. That just seems normal to me.
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Post by Deleted on Jul 8, 2019 12:51:52 GMT
As in, "Will you work extra hours for less money?" in a world where burnout is becoming increasingly common. But hey, let's slag them off anyway.
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