From Britain, whose “single payer” (i. e., government monopoly) health care system is much admired by American liberals, comes this story:
A smoker is facing years of pain after an NHS hospital refused to set his broken ankle unless he gives up cigarettes.
John Nuttall, 57, needs the operation to fix the ankle he broke in three places two years ago and which was not healed by a plaster cast.
Doctors at the Royal Cornwall Hospital in Truro have refused to operate to rebuild the ankle because they say Mr Nuttall's heavy smoking would reduce the chance of a full recovery.
They have told him to give up smoking before they operate but the retired builder has been unable to break his habit.
Mr Nuttall says he is in constant pain from the grating of the broken bones against each other and has been prescribed daily doses ofmorphine. . . .
A spokesman for the hospital trust said: “Smoking has a very big influence on the outcome of this type of surgery and the healing process would be hindered significantly.”
I don’t know how much influence nicotine has over the healing of ankles, but I do know that, in America at least, many operations are performed that have less than a perfect chance of a perfect outcome. Patients are allowed to evaluate risks and rewards for themselves. Not in the single-payer utopia.
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