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Britain's About to Get Skinny (And Rich) Thanks to Fat Jabs




Okay, so Wes Streeting just dropped this bombshell that honestly made me spit out my coffee.

The Health Secretary basically told reporters that Britain's going to be "fat free" within ten years. Not his exact words, but close enough. And here's the kicker - he reckons this whole weight-loss injection revolution could save us £30 billion. That's billion with a B, people.

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The Math Actually Makes Sense (Surprisingly)

Look, I was skeptical at first. Another politician making wild promises? But then I dug into the numbers and... damn. Obesity-related illnesses are bleeding the NHS dry to the tune of £30 billion every single year. That's more than some countries' entire GDP.

Right now, if you want Ozempic or Mounjaro and don't meet the strict NHS criteria (BMI of 35+ or 30+ with health issues), you're looking at £2,500 a year out of your own pocket. My neighbor Sarah's been paying that for eight months now - she jokes it's cheaper than her mortgage, but barely.



Door-to-Door Doctors? What Year Is This?

Here's where things get weird. Streeting's ten-year plan includes sending doctors door-to-door like some kind of medical Jehovah's Witnesses. I'm not even joking.

They're planning 250-300 new health centers that'll be open six days a week, twelve hours a day. Staffed with everyone from dentists to job advisers. Because apparently your unemployment status is now a medical condition? (Actually, given the stress levels, maybe it is.)

The AI bit caught my attention too - robots answering patient questions through the NHS app and writing letters for doctors. My GP can barely use email properly, so this should be... interesting.

The Fairness Thing

Streeting made this point about fairness that actually hit home. "Not everyone in this country has £2,500 a year to spend on weight-loss jabs," he said. Which is obvious, but needed saying.

For a Labour MP, he's hitting the right notes about the NHS being available based on need, not your bank balance. Though I can't help wondering if this is just election positioning.

Will It Actually Work Though?

The National Institute for Health and Care Excellence (try saying that three times fast) estimates these jabs could add 257,000 working days to the economy. Worth £35.6 million per year.

Dr Sam Roberts, their chief exec, said something that stuck with me: "The cost of inaction is simply too high." Fair point. We're already spending the money - just on treating diabetes, heart disease, and joint problems instead of preventing them.

But here's what nobody's talking about - what happens when people stop taking these jabs? Because they're not exactly a permanent fix, are they?

The Dentist Trap

Oh, and they're basically going to force newly qualified dentists to work for the NHS for three years before going private. Which sounds a bit... authoritarian? But given that finding an NHS dentist is harder than finding a decent parking spot in London, maybe desperate times call for desperate measures.

The whole thing feels ambitious to the point of being slightly unhinged. But then again, maybe that's exactly what the NHS needs right now - someone willing to think big instead of just applying band-aids to a system that's hemorrhaging money and patients.

Time will tell if Streeting's vision becomes reality or just another political promise that gets quietly forgotten after the next election cycle.


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Did you miss our previous article...
https://hellofaread.com/politics/god-rachel-after-wrecking-everything-those-tears-just-made-it-worse-for-all-of-us