Just a thought.
Some people are starting to say that the NHS is here to protect the general population, not the other way around.
I can see why the government wants to protect the NHS, for political reasons. If the NHS did become overwhelmed (not that it was, even at the height of the pandemic) you might have headlines about patients "dying on trolleys in hospital corridors". That would be political poison. The opposition would never let them forget it. So we have our government erring on the side of caution.
Also their scientific advisors are. If they stress the worse case scenario and that worst case scenario is avoided, then they will claim that their policies were right all along.
But whilst we are locking down the economy is going to hell in a handcart and the NHS is refusing treatment to "normal" illnesses. This is very important; people will die because of this.
But why is the NHS doing this? Why refuse treatment even during the summer when the pandemic was negligible?
Maybe because of this reason. In May the Guardian newspaper published an article saying that 20% of the people who had caught covid19 had caught it in hospital. Other sources said 25%. A King's College London study in August said that at least 12.5% of patients had caught covid19 in hospital.
So we have from 12.5-25% of cases where a hospital infected someone.
That's not very good, is it? Maybe what we are defending the NHS against is bad publicity?
Because if all that normal hospital surgery etc had gone ahead, a lot more people would have died because they caught covid19 in hospital. And maybe NHS bosses are scared of the finger being pointed at them?