Health Fear
February 17th, 2010

The NHS: a remarkable thing in a way. Few other countries offer free health-care. In
One recent news story regarding tragic doctor / patient relations has shaken people to the
Core.
The story talks about the other side of the coin–private health care–and
covers something we are fairly unfamiliar with here in the UK; for many years we’ve been used to welcoming doctor’s in to our homes when we are ill, often relying on them—the elderly, especially—and trusting them with our lives without a second thought.
But where to begin policing such matters? As with pedophilia and the difficulty there being that nothing can be done unless someone has actually done something, how can we make sure that a doctor is really as good as they say they are before they make a mistake? And how long would it take, also, to vet every single doctor who comes into our small country, and be absolutely certain that they are 100% sure of the use of the language and the implementation of the law?
The news is a powerful tool with the ability to make one certain thing—a very rare thing—seem like a wide-spread epidemic. So would we be better of without knowing?
I suppose the aforementioned article may cause some lasting panic, but I also think that had it not been so widely reported the public would have been missing out; even if this only happens once or twice every few years, like anything serious, it just wouldn’t pay to not have the information there, and the option for us to make our own personal judgement.
I need some input from all of you on this one, I was talking to my best friend the other evening and she asked me to visit this site on smart lipo London. I think she is actually thinking about getting this done. How do I undertake the subject of saying that she shouldn’t really go through with it and she should try a natural substitute of taking off weight first



