Like any other organisation, some hospitals are coping better than others. I expect that hospitals in areas of significant deprivation and more transient populations have greater challenges to deal with. I suppose it is natural that we tend to hear about what has gone wrong, and not so often about what has gone right. It is good to hear posters like Morghew who have been more than satisfied with the care they or their families have received under the NHS. That is not to deny that some people have received very poor care.
TyneAngel I can quite see why you have chosen to pay for private cataract operations, given that your poor sight has caused you accidents and is affecting many areas of your life. It is interesting what you say about the price of £2,000-£3,000 quoted four years ago and the current quote of £8,000. In 2013 the Mail reported that it costs the NHS £932 for the first eye and £808 for the second eye. Even if the cost has gone up since then, I doubt that it is anywhere near £8,000 - but private providers know that people will pay for the operations if they are desperate enough, even if they have to scrape the money together. As you say, not everyone can, and prices are likely to continue rising as more and more people are unable to get timely treatment on the NHS
The same report seems to reflect your own experience:
"Thousands of elderly people are being denied the chance to save their sight with vital cataract surgery.
"Patients in some areas have been told their vision is still ‘too good’ for an operation, even though their cataracts are so severe they cannot drive or read.
"Clara Eaglen, of the RNIB, said: ‘NHS “efficiency savings” achieved by cutting cataract operations are a false economy as denying treatment leaves patients at risk of depression, social isolation and fall-related hip fractures which are more costly to treat.’
Yet another example of short term savings that will cost dearly in the long term.