Originally posted by d000hg
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Do higher taxes on booze and fags work?
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His heart is in the right place - shame we can't say the same about his brain... -
Originally posted by SueEllen View PostPeople are just turning into long living fat pigs instead costing 10% of the NHS budget.
Maybe it was cheaper and more revenue efficient to let people die younger of smoking related diseases.
Lazy fat people are a much bigger drain on the NHS and nothing is being done.
I think the government needs to stop telling people that it is bad to smoke and drink but not challenge the idea that replacing that with stuffing the front of your head with cheap high fat food is an alternative.
Interestingly enough weed is now legal in Nevada so you can go gamble n good stoned at the same time, legally.
Think the UK needs to be come a bit more progressive really!Comment
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Originally posted by original PM View PostExactly this smokers cost the NHS money but they compensate for that with the amount of tax they pay.
Lazy fat people are a much bigger drain on the NHS and nothing is being done.
I think the government needs to stop telling people that it is bad to smoke and drink but not challenge the idea that replacing that with stuffing the front of your head with cheap high fat food is an alternative.
Interestingly enough weed is now legal in Nevada so you can go gamble n good stoned at the same time, legally.
Think the UK needs to be come a bit more progressive really!His heart is in the right place - shame we can't say the same about his brain...Comment
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Originally posted by Mordac View PostInteresting story on the news yesterday, apparently the biggest cause of death is now dementia. Such is the price of living longer. Instead of enjoying ourselves, eating, drinking and smoking too much, we are now destined to live our final years drinking through a straw, dribbling most of it away, and costing the NHS trillions. Kind of makes you hanker for the good old days, doesn't it?
But yes this assumption that if I do not drink or smoke and live healthy I will therefore be happy and sprightly until I am 95 is incredibly misleading.
My Grandma died at 93 - but as far as I was concerned my Grandma left us sometime when she was about 87 - after that when she does not know who you are, who she is or where she is all - is that still being alive?
So fook it gonna smoke, drink and die with a smile on my face
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Originally posted by original PM View PostThe biggest cause of death is..... old age!!!
But yes this assumption that if I do not drink or smoke and live healthy I will therefore be happy and sprightly until I am 95 is incredibly misleading.
My Grandma died at 93 - but as far as I was concerned my Grandma left us sometime when she was about 87 - after that when she does not know who you are, who she is or where she is all - is that still being alive?
So fook it gonna smoke, drink and die with a smile on my face
His heart is in the right place - shame we can't say the same about his brain...Comment
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Originally posted by Mordac View PostInteresting story on the news yesterday, apparently the biggest cause of death is now dementia. Such is the price of living longer. Instead of enjoying ourselves, eating, drinking and smoking too much, we are now destined to live our final years drinking through a straw, dribbling most of it away, and costing the NHS trillions. Kind of makes you hanker for the good old days, doesn't it?"Being nice costs nothing and sometimes gets you extra bacon" - Pondlife.Comment
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Originally posted by DaveB View PostFrom the NHS perspective dementia is a cheap disease. There is no cure to administer and no expensive drugs to be provided, it requires no palliative medical care like cancer, no surgery or other major intervention by medical staff like heart disease. The vast majority of sufferers live in self funded private care homes, at least until their savings run out when costs are funded by the local authority, not the NHS.His heart is in the right place - shame we can't say the same about his brain...Comment
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Originally posted by d000hg View PostAre there not studies showing higher prices DO work? As an extreme example look at the 5p carrier bag charge, but more relevantly hasn't Scotland seen their minimum booze pricing have some effect?
Mind you, when having to buy several bags for a weekly supermarket shop, it can mount up.Work in the public sector? Read the IR35 FAQ hereComment
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Originally posted by Mordac View PostWhether it's the NHS or the local council taxpayer, someone always pays.
Once you're diagnosed you generally have less than 10 years with dementia, and it can be less than 5 depending on the type and age of onset. Selling your home when you have to go into a care home will cover the costs up until death for the majority of people and the LA wont fund care home fees while you still have assets to pay for it yourself."Being nice costs nothing and sometimes gets you extra bacon" - Pondlife.Comment
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Originally posted by DaveB View PostYes, but it's not the NHS as you stated, and the LA only starts paying once their own money has gone so it's for a limited time anyway. Those costs are still cheaper than major medical intervention and long term treatment for the other big killers.
Once you're diagnosed you generally have less than 10 years with dementia, and it can be less than 5 depending on the type and age of onset. Selling your home when you have to go into a care home will cover the costs up until death for the majority of people and the LA wont fund care home fees while you still have assets to pay for it yourself.His heart is in the right place - shame we can't say the same about his brain...Comment
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