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Young people want to ‘go private’ – I’m a lifelong supporter of the NHS, but I can see why

9 21
wednesday

It is 10.25am on a Friday and I am Googling “online pharmacies”. I have a mild infection and I weigh up whether talking to an AI doctor will be more efficient than queueing at my GP surgery before the weekend. After a seven-minute multiple-choice questionnaire, I am deemed eligible for antibiotics: a single sachet is £43. I close the page and consider spending the cash self-medicating with a family-size Uber Eats instead.

I thought of this later as I read the news that half of millennials in the UK are planning to use private healthcare in the next year. A survey by the Independent Healthcare Provider Network found that those aged 34 to 44 were the most likely age group to go private. Forty-nine per cent said they were likely to use it in the next 12 months, with young professionals increasingly opting for employment with medical insurance. Forget career progression or annual leave, nowadays jobseekers want eye tests and cancer checks.

As a millennial with the long-term health conditions of a boomer, I can identify with this mindset. I’ve always been ideologically against private healthcare, to the extent that when that Bupa advert comes on the TV where the woman in remission from cancer dances joyfully, I involuntarily yell: “Parasites! Did she have to sell her home to pay for chemotherapy?!” But with NHS waiting lists still sky high, like many, I’ve found myself relying on private healthcare for the first time. When I had nerve damage in my arm and was struggling to type this column, I reluctantly booked an appointment with a private physiotherapist rather than waiting several months on the NHS. Without private insurance, I paid the £75 an hour cost and felt lucky that I could afford to.

This is clearly a problem for the individual: a generation who........

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