In the Euro Health Consumer Index for 2007, the annual survey of EU healthcare, the United Kingdom healthcare service ranked 17th out of 29 countries for their public healthcare systems - a poorer performance than 2006. Despite excelling in providing information to patients, the quality of their healthcare service lags far behind many of their northern European neighbours.
The 2007 Index winner is Austria, followed by the Netherlands (winner in 2005), France (winner in 2006), Switzerland, Germany and Sweden.
UK healthcare remains mediocre, according to the 2007 Index, launched in Brussels. Despite class-leading performance in patient information, the system falls down on other major key indicators of quality, including waiting times.
In five categories, covering 27 performance indicators, UK scores 581 points out of a potential 1,000, compared to 806 for winners Austria. That puts the UK in a similar league to Hungary, Italy and Slovenia. On a positive note, the UK healthcare system is once again at the forefront of patient access to information, via NHS direct, a patient ombudsman and quality rankings for providers such as scorecards for every hospital.
However, where the UK lets its patients down is by poor access to new treatments, especially in cancer - 5-year survival rates for cancer in UK score poorly - longer than necessary waiting times. Rates of MRSA infections also remain an issue.
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