dave50, I salute you for your courage. You are of course absolutely correct but what depresses me deeply is that there are so few like you and that is a big part of the problem. There is no serious drive toward improvement, just romantic/sycophantic cooing. Admiring NHS staff for becoming ill and dying while doing their job is a sweet and sour contradiction like celebrating the Charge of the Light Brigade for riding full gallop into certain death, they were hopelessly out-gunned. The staff prevented total catastrophe but the NHS failed (people died needlessly in their thousands). It is a spectacular form of folly which when turned into being seen as glorious conduct, passionate poetry and all, looks also distinctly perverse due to the inevitable doom.
The NHS is at somewhere between 20 and 25 in the world rankings when all things are considered, accessibility, results, cost, etc. The waiting lists, poor results, etc. are the outcome of something other/more than the efforts of nursing and other staff, the system as a whole is mediocre. Infant and maternal mortality, cure rates, life expectancy, blunders/scandals, etc. in the UK are worse than the best elsewhere. To be accepted for free into the system is little consolation when the treatment is likely to be flawed or fatal at worst - I certainly would rather be able to trust completely that my medical treatment will be as good as anywhere else, and pay toward it if that is what it takes. The NHS could be World's Best but it isn't, well short of it (the final margin to reach the very top is proportionately the hardest to produce).
You can expect howls of anger to be directed at you and being plastered with "Anti-British" labels for speaking the truth.