I think we do need to have some interesting conversations about the NHS that move away from the framing "Privatisation Vs Increase Funding" and onto something new, I'm against privatisation in a general sense but also against continuing to increase the funding (already increased from 7% to 11%), and obviously leaving things how they are is going to result in disaster. We need a new strategy.
We need a holistic approach to the wellbeing of the entire country in reality, but I doubt it's an easy thing to implement.
The obesity epidemic is going to cripple the NHS for the next generation anyway, but no system will be able to cope well. We need to find a way to improve health, not just treat ill health.
The rise in mental health issues are related to a combination of lifestyle and societal issues.
The decline of "community" is causing a rise in anti social behaviour, criminal activity and drug use all of which stretch our public sector.
The cost of living is causing greater poverty and homelessness.
The consumerist attitude of the nation is leading to people amassing huge debts just to have the thing that they don't even need.
The increasingly capitalist view of our public sector is causing crises in Energy/Water/Travel just for starters.
We have our priorities all wrong.
But If anyone dares to advocate anything for the common good of the people in this country, the media throw "Marxists", "communism" and "champagne socialists" at them in order to deflect. These people have the money to sidestep the issues that this country faces and are happy with the power structure because they're higher up.
Things are out of hand, we need to take a step back and decide what can be done for the benefit and wellbeing of 70m people. But there's not a single policy that could achieve that, it needs a whole mindset shift. It needs people to think of others and not just themselves for the greater good.