Rationing happens in the NHS by a combination of a fixed budget for each Primary Care Trust (typically a hospital and associated doctors, health centres) national panel on what treatments are considered effective and good value for money, and some government guidance on healthcare targets.
Mostly this combination means we don't pay for stuff that doesn't work, it also means we aren't paying for hugely expensive treatments of limited effectiveness. But sometimes it means we also aren't paying for hugely expensive treatments that are effective.
There's also a move to creating specialist regional/national centres of excellence for rarer/more severe conditions. Which is practical here 'cause we're such a small country.
Mostly this combination means we don't pay for stuff that doesn't work, it also means we aren't paying for hugely expensive treatments of limited effectiveness. But sometimes it means we also aren't paying for hugely expensive treatments that are effective.
There's also a move to creating specialist regional/national centres of excellence for rarer/more severe conditions. Which is practical here 'cause we're such a small country.
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