Not sure why you landed on 2016, but the privatisation of the NHS has been going on for a lot longer, and while it's unlikely to happen as long as profit is the main motive, it is still reversible, and the fight to save the NHS (and the population) from the government is still ongoing
https://www.yournhsneedsyou.com/timeline/
Just sort of picked a year that seemed like a turning point for the government ramping up the levels of depravity, and care becoming harder to get, of course there's no black and white moment
In our local surgery the reduction in the number of GP's is noticeable. There were four GP's but now there are only two having been replaced by one consultant nurse.
The GP's that do remain tend to have a rather high turnover and don't stay for long.
“I’m not actually sure I’m going to be able to find a job,” she confesses, explaining that there’s just one qualified GP position advertised on NHS Jobs within a 10-mile radius of her home in Leeds.
Separate data published last Tuesday by the Private Healthcare Information Network showed that private hospitals cared for 665,000 people, a combination of PMI and “self-payers”, between January and September 2023 – a new record and 7% higher year on year. The commonest procedures performed included blood tests, knee replacements, peripheral nerve blocks, eardrum surgery and tonsil removal.