News1 min ago
Another Waste Of Nhs Funds
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No best answer has yet been selected by hc4361. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.I'm not sure. We wouldn't argue that prisoners shouldn't receive treatment for cancer, hip replacements, cataracts, etc etc.
If we accept that sex change ops are an acceptable use of funds for non-prisoners then I'm not sure why we'd deny it for prisoners. At what point do we say treatment/operations should be done for non-prisoners but not done for prisoners.
Of course some may feel sex change ops should not be done at NHS expense for anyone, but that's a separate issue .
If we accept that sex change ops are an acceptable use of funds for non-prisoners then I'm not sure why we'd deny it for prisoners. At what point do we say treatment/operations should be done for non-prisoners but not done for prisoners.
Of course some may feel sex change ops should not be done at NHS expense for anyone, but that's a separate issue .
This is just idle speculation, but supposing that the struggle to come to terms with his (now her) gender identity was in no small part responsible for his criminal activity? No evidence for this, but it's not impossible given the difficulties some trans-people have. Then the surgery would be worth it, no? £10k for the surgery, that may help to avoid the cost of another trial/ imprisonment -- but, of course, this argument depends upon her staying out of prison from now on, which remains to be seen.
Oh dear - it can't just have been given to him without very serious funding considerations, the NHS doesn't just go ahead with these things, the funding has to come from the NHS organisation commissioning those operations. There must be very good background reason for applying for the funding for it.
On another point - does he now get moved to a women's prison?
On another point - does he now get moved to a women's prison?
With the NHS in crisis as it is now sex change and cosmetic surgery procedures should be suspended.
I don't consider reconstructive plastic surgery after major trauma to be cosmetic, I am referring specifically to nose jobs, tummy tucks, breast implants, eye lifts etc that have no medical need at all.
I don't consider reconstructive plastic surgery after major trauma to be cosmetic, I am referring specifically to nose jobs, tummy tucks, breast implants, eye lifts etc that have no medical need at all.
Leaving it until he comes out of jail would save the NHS money in the short term but not really in the long run, unless he dies before he's released. If doing the op helps him overcome his issues and criminal behaviours it may be a net saving to the taxpayer compared with the expense of maintaining him in prison.
I think there are questions to be asked about which treatments NHS should fund in general but I can't see the logic of denying treatment to prisoners that would otherwise be given to non-prisoners
I think there are questions to be asked about which treatments NHS should fund in general but I can't see the logic of denying treatment to prisoners that would otherwise be given to non-prisoners
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