personally, i don't agree. i work for the local NHS and the money that the government gives us to pay for all health care for all people within our area (including doctors, dentists, a and e, ambulance, operations, mental health, consultant appointments, maternity services, community services, district nurses, physiotherapy and prescriptions) equates to about £1000 per person per year. When you consider that, for example even simple/common drug like omeprazole can cost £60 per month, and at the most the nhs will only be getting a prescription charge back (meaning actual cost = about £50 per patient per month) and that a hospital stay costs between £250-300 per night, rising to much more for itu and that an OPA costs about £150 per person, you soon see that the £1000 gets eroded pretty quickly. Added to that the fact that residential care costs between £500-£1000 per week i can't understand where people get the idea it should be paid for for them. If they were in care for a year, that would be approximately 52 years worth of their allocation of health funding(taken at the upper estimate of care fees), and really who among is can say that we haven't used any health services for 52 years? It really really makes me annoyed when people moan about prescription charges too!