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The House of Lords discusses and votes on the Health and Social Care / Destroy the NHS Bill today and tomorrow. There are amendments proposed to delay or abandon the bill.

Many news reports reaffirm opposition from various parties.

Conservative election poster 2010

A few recent news articles about the UK’s Conservative and Liberal-Democrat (Conservative) coalition government – the ConDem’s – brutal attack on the National Health Service.

Health Reforms Have ‘No Mandate, No Evidence And No Support’ Peers Say

An alliance of Peers began their attempt to block the NHS Bill as the government’s controversial health reforms were debated in the House of Lords.

Conservative Lord Howe kicked off the debate after distributing a last-minute letter to Lords warning against two peers’ attempts to have the Bill send to committee on Tuesday morning. He outlined concessions the government were willing to make, saying that while it was “unequivocally clear” that health secretary Andrew Lansley still had ultimate responsibility for the NHS under the legislation, they were willing to make this clearer.

But Howe’s claim that Labour had “wholeheartedly embraced” many principles of the Bill and it was “the inverse of a top down reorganisation” was shot down by Labour peer Baroness Thornton.

She said the government had shown “breathtaking disregard for the democratic process”. And she reminded Liberal Democrat peers of their reputation for protecting the NHS, warning them not to put this in “jeopardy”

Thornton added that the government had “no mandate, no evidence and no support” and warned the Bill would turn getting NHS care into “shopping”.

Labour peer and former GP Lord Rea, who has attempted to table an amendment halting the Bill altogether, accused the government of “deliberate concealment” of their intentions for the NHS prior to being elected.

Over 100 Lords are scheduled to speak at the debate, including former Labour health minister Lord Darzai and Lib Dem peer Baroness Williams, with the House set to sit until 11:30 this evening.

Medical organisations have united in opposition to the changes, which will dissolve primary care trusts (PCTs).

Opponents of the reforms argue they will allow private patients to leapfrog to the front of queues for surgery, open the NHS up to competition and create a new and complex layer of quangos to replaces PCTs.

The Chairman of the Academy of Medical Royal Colleges, Professor Sir Neil Douglas, has expressed serious concern about the NHS reforms, saying the Bill could “damage patient care”.

And the BMA has written to every peer in the Lords outlining their concerns about the Bill.

London university academics have also written to medical journal the Lancet saying are the reforms “fundamentally flawed”.

Psychiatrists want NHS reforms to be scrapped – 10/11/2011 – Community Care

Just 12% of psychiatrists believe the government’s NHS reforms will lead to better patient care, as legislation to enact them enters the House of Lords today.

A Royal College of Psychiatrists survey, answered by 1,890 doctors, found that 84% believed that the college should call for the Health and Social Care Bill to be withdrawn.

The Bill would open up NHS-funded care to “any qualified provider” and place commissioning responsibility in new clinical commissioning groups, headed by GPs.

Some 86% of psychiatrists thought the reforms would lead to greater fragmentation of care, while 85% disagreed that it would improve integration between health and social care or deliver cost-effective care.

“Our findings are extremely worrying,” said Sue Bailey, president of the Royal College of Psychiatrists.

“Our mental health service users are a particularly vulnerable group, who already experience considerable health inequalities. History tells us that in times of economic restraint, when combined with major reform, those with mental health problems fare the worst.”

New shadow health secretary Andy Burnham has also called for the government to scrap the Bill while it is expected to be significantly amended in the House of Lords.

‘Paralysis’ in NHS if reforms passed | InPharm

A prominent NHS leader has warned the government’s reforms are unworkable in their current form.

NHS Confederation chief executive Mike Farrar says the NHS risks being “paralysed by fuzzy structures and decision-making processes,” which would prevent it from dealing with financial pressures and improving quality of care.

The warning comes as the Health and Social Care Bill is being read by Peers in the House of Lords today.

Farrar says his organisation supported ‘some of the principles in the Bill,’ but added that at a practical level it has few enthusiasts.

He said: “[Peers] still need to sort out some of the fundamentals – the accountability of all the key players in the system must be crystal clear, not least of the Secretary of State.

“And we also need peers to get beneath the surface of the legislation and give us the practical tools we need to tackle the major problems we face,” he said.

He added that the health service would have “few powers to take charge of its destiny” adding: “It is still unclear that the NHS reforms do what has been said on the tin.”

75% of GPs call for Health Bill to be withdrawn | GPonline.com

Around three quarters of GPs agree with calls for the Health Bill to be withdrawn, a RCGP survey shows.

It comes as the House of Lords begins debating the NHS reform plans today before voting on whether the Health Bill should be withdrawn on Wednesday.

The largest RCGP survey yet of GP opinion on the reforms shows just 4% of respondents think the reorganisation would result in better care for patients.

The poll of 1,900 GPs also indicates that support for involvement in clinically-led commissioning has dwindled over the past three months.

A previous RCGP survey in July showed 62% of GPs did not want to be involved on the board of a clinical commissioning group (CCG), but the latest survey now shows that figure to be 68%.

It also shows around seven in 10 GPs feel they will not have sufficient time to be involved in CCG activities, while two thirds say they don’t think they have been sufficiently resourced to carry out the role.

RCGP chairwoman Dr Clare Gerada said the results of the survey are ‘impossible to ignore’.

She said: ‘The survey confirms what we have been saying all along; the college has made its support for placing GPs at the heart of the health service clear, but …the majority of respondents still have concerns about commercialisation, increased bureaucracy and standards of patient care that the government has not allayed.

‘With the Bill making its way through the House of Lords, it is important that peers have as much information as possible so that they can ask the relevant questions, and make informed choices about what happens next.’

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The House of Lords is to discuss and vote on the Health and Social Care / Destroy the NHS Bill today and tomorrow. There are amendments proposed to delay or abandon the bill.

The Con-Dem coalition government – despite obvious evidence to the contrary – claims widespread support amoung medical practicioners for the proposed reforms.

A further letter by accomplished medical professionals – with a few celebrities thrown in for good measure – makes yet another statement of opposition to the bill and urges the Lords to make major changes.

The new Shadow Health Secretary Andy Burnham offers to collude with the ConDems overs Clinical Commissioning Groups if the bill is dropped. I’m surprised at this move and don’t agree with it. I was quite impressed with John Healey who has apparently resigned for family reasons.

Some photos of Sunday’s ‘Block the Bridge, Block the Bill’ protest called by UK Uncut.

Conservative election poster 2010

A few recent news articles about the UK’s Conservative and Liberal-Democrat (Conservative) coalition government – the ConDem’s – brutal attack on the National Health Service.

BBC News – Lords to debate controversial NHS shake-up bill

The government’s controversial plans to overhaul the NHS are set to be debated in the Lords.

The Health and Social Care Bill would increase competition and give clinicians control of budgets.

The bill has already been substantially altered following criticism from NHS staff and Liberal Democrat MPs.

But Labour peers are expected to table an amendment calling for it to be dropped altogether, while Lib Dems have vowed to push for further changes.

On Sunday, hundreds of protesters gathered on Westminster Bridge in central London to urge peers to “block the bill”.

And last week almost 400 health professionals and academics wrote to peers asking them to vote against the bill, arguing it would do “irreparable harm to the NHS, to individual patients, and to society as a whole”.

The government says the changes are vital to help the NHS cope with the demands of an ageing population, the costs of new drugs and treatments and the impact of lifestyle factors, such as obesity.

Select committee

The Health and Social Care Bill has been described as the biggest shake-up of the NHS since its creation.

The original plans proved so controversial that the government took the unprecedented step of halting the legislation while it carried out a “listening exercise” with critics – and subsequently altered the bill considerably.

Ministers now say it does have support from the medical profession, but groups such as the Royal College of Nursing and Royal College of GPs have continued to express concern.

Almost 100 peers have requested the chance to speak during the Lords second reading debate on Tuesday and Wednesday. Peers are set to vote on the bill on Wednesday.

Among them, two crossbench peers – Lords Owen and Hennessey – have tabled an amendment calling for part of the bill to be sent to a special select committee – which allows witnesses to give evidence – for further scrutiny.

They say the bill raises serious constitutional issues, particularly aspects relating to the role of the health secretary in overseeing the NHS and the role of a new body, Monitor, in promoting competition within it.
… (article continues)

Related: BBC News – NHS shake-up: The sticking points

Senior doctors revolt against health reforms – Health News, Health & Families – The Independent

More than 60 leading medical professionals have demanded that the Government’s “unpopular and undemocratic” health reforms, which return to Westminster today, be either scrapped or heavily rewritten.

Their call, in a letter to The Independent, increases the pressure on Andrew Lansley, the Health Secretary, who faces widespread opposition in the House of Lords to the planned overhaul.

Signatories include consultants, surgeons, psychiatrists and paediatricians, as well as midwives and family doctors. They have joined forces with public figures including the actors Julie Christie and David Morrissey, the comedian Russell Brand and the fashion designer Dame Vivienne Westwood to demand a halt to the reforms. They say that, despite a series of amendments to the Health and Social Care Bill, Mr Lansley’s plans still do not have the support of the public or the profession.

“It is perfectly clear – as the Prime Minister is acutely aware – that the British public does not support the privatisation of the NHS, and it is a matter of fact that no one ever voted for it, and so this current Bill has no democratic mandate whatsoever,” they write.

They call for the “suspension of, or significant amendment of, the Bill in order that it can be supported by a majority of the medical profession and the British public as a whole, who pay for, support and service our great NHS”. The signatories add: “No one is against reform and change, but the NHS is too important and valuable to our society to be transformed forever in this unpopular, undemocratic way.”

Their letter comes as the Bill returns to the House of Lords where it is due to face concerted opposition, with so many peers requesting to speak that business managers have been forced to set aside another day for the debate.

More than 90 members have applied to speak in the Second Reading debate. Attempts will be made to block the Bill or to delay it by referring key parts to a select committee.

Ministers are expected to offer one concession – an amendment designed to spell out more clearly that the Health Secretary has ultimate legal responsibility for the NHS. But there is growing anxiety within the Government that critics could muster enough support to delay the measure.
… (article continues)

Letters: No one voted for the NHS to be privatised – Letters, Opinion – The Independent

As the House of Lords prepares to vote on the NHS and Social Care Bill, it is clear that medical professionals and the British people – despite a protracted listening exercise by the Government – still do not support existing plans for the NHS.

Despite the Prime Minister’s claims to the contrary, it is public fact that every single Royal College representing nurses, GPs and midwives maintain serious concerns about the Bill. The official policy of the British Medical Association is that the Bill be withdrawn.

… (letter continues)

Related: Medical royal colleges join forces to oppose NHS reforms – Telegraph

Management in Practice – Labour to back CCGs if Bill is dropped

Labour will work with the government to reform NHS commissioning but only if the Health Bill is scrapped.

The new Shadow Health Secretary Andy Burnham has written to the Secretary of State for Health Andrew Lansley, warning the NHS is now in the “danger zone” as he has “failed to build a consensus around his plans”.

Burnham said it is time to “stop digging” and “change course” if patient care is to be protected.

He has pledged his commitment to work alongside the government to develop “true clinician-led commissioning in every locality in England” in return for the withdrawal of the Bill.

Labour believes that such reforms do not need legislation, and could be implemented quickly.

“This approach offers a way ahead that everybody could unite behind,” said Burnham.
… (article continues)

GPs join NHS reform ‘block the bridge’ protest | GPonline.com

Up to 3,000 protestors, many dressed in surgical scrubs, lay down on the bridge in central London at 1pm as a huge ‘Save our NHS’ banner was unfurled across it.

The demonstration came as the House of Lords prepared to debate the Health Bill this week.

Block the Bridge, Block the Bill protest 9 October 2011
Block the Bridge, Block the Bill protest 9 October 2011

GPs including RCGP chairwoman Dr Clare Gerada visited the protest to show their support.

Block the Bridge, Block the Bill protest 9 October 2011
Block the Bridge, Block the Bill protest 9 October 2011

More images

Dr Louise Irvine, a partner at the Amersham Vale Practice, in Lewisham, London said she took part because it was important to show the profession’s anger at the reforms.

‘This Bill has hardly had any scrutiny, it has been rushed through,’ she said. ‘Many MPs have said they didn’t have time to study it properly.’

The reforms were the ‘biggest change to the NHS since it began’, Dr Irvine warned. She argued that the government had no mandate for the reforms, and was trying to implement changes in the face of huge opposition from NHS staff and healthcare organisations.

Dr Irvine said she hoped the House of Lords would delay the Bill for so long that it would run out of time, or throw it out.

‘I’m worried about privatisation and fragmentation of health services, the huge transaction costs of running a market, the loss of accountability of the secretary of state, the postcode lottery as clinical commissioning groups decide what services are available on the NHS,’ she said.

Dr Irvine warned that if the range of services available on the NHS became more limited, patients may be forced to take out private health insurance as a back-up to NHS healthcare.

Dr Julia Hodges, of the Villa Street Practice in Southwark, London, said: ‘Andrew Lansley likes to make out that GPs are backing the Bill and support what he’s doing, but all the surveys of GPs’ attitudes show 60 to 70 per cent do not support it. So it was good to be able to put people straight. I worry our relationship with patients will suffer because of the reforms. They will ask if their GP is benefiting financially from the way they refer. I worry answer may be ‘Yes’ after the Bill.’

But a DoH spokeswoman rejected fears about the NHS reforms. ‘Claims that we aim to privatise the NHS amount to nothing more than ludicrous scaremongering. We have made it crystal clear, time and again, that we will never, ever, privatise the NHS,’ she said.

‘The reality is that we’ve protected the NHS budget, we are giving more power and choice to patients over how they get treated, keeping waiting times low and cutting bureaucracy so more cash gets to the front line.’

[You can’t trust the Tories – or the Lib-Dem Tories – on the NHS]

 

27/11/13 Having received a takedown notice from the Independent newspaper for a different posting, I have reviewed this article which links to an article at the Independent’s website in order to attempt to ensure conformance with copyright laws.

I consider this posting to comply with copyright laws since
a. Only a small portion of the original article has been quoted satisfying the fair use criteria, and / or
b. This posting satisfies the requirements of a derivative work.

Please be assured that this blog is a non-commercial blog (weblog) which does not feature advertising and has not ever produced any income.

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Another £75 billion for bankers

UK Uncut occupy Westminster bridge in protest at the intended abolition of the NHS by the ConDem – Conservative and Liberal-Democrat (Conservative) – coalition government.

Conservative election poster 2010

A few recent news articles about the UK’s Conservative and Liberal-Democrat coalition government – the ConDem’s – brutal attack on the National Health Service.

Central London bridge blocked to save the NHS / Britain / Home – Morning Star

An army of anti-cuts activists occupied London’s Westminster Bridge today for a last-ditch battle to stop the government’s NHS reforms.

Tax avoidance activists UK Uncut led thousands of health workers, pensioners and students who swept onto the bridge for a mass sit-in symbolically located between the Houses of Parliament and the St Thomas hospital across the Thames.

The Block The Bridge, Block The Bill protest took place on the eve a critical House of Lords vote on the Health and Social Care Bill which will hand power to GP consortia and allow private providers into the service en masse.

Tory ministers claim the plans will slash health-care overheads.

But NHS campaigners warn that they will spell the beginning of the end of a state National Health Service.

Public Health for Cumbria director and former UK Public Health Association chairman Dr John Ashton, who joined the protests, said there was real anger across the NHS at the threat to this most cherished public institution.

“This confused and convoluted Bill threatens to undermine the guarantee of health security irrespective of position or wealth and, at the same time, creates the conditions for private health-care companies to come in and cherry-pick profitable parts of care,” he said.

“I am proud that public health specialists have been able to give voice to this anger over the past few days, an anger which has no political boundaries!”

Civil Service union PCS leader Mark Serwotka said that the Bill represents the “gravest threat to the NHS” since its foundation.

“Peaceful protest and civil disobedience have a long and proud history in this country, and are a perfectly legitimate response to plans that no-one voted for and no-one wants,” he said.

“This protest will send an important message of support to the brilliant doctors, nurses and other health-care workers who work day in, day out to make our health service the envy of the world, and an equally important message of opposition to a Tory-led government trying to unpick all of this.”

Related: Protesters against NHS reforms occupy Westminster Bridge | Politics | guardian.co.uk BBC News – NHS reform protesters block Westminster Bridge We won’t take this lying down: Thousands of demonstrators force Westminster Bridge to close with protest over Government health reforms | Mail Online

The Stroke Association – Increased waiting times for patients needing NHS physiotherapy

Hospital shuts doors to new admissions | This is Devon

A community hospital in Cornwall has closed its doors to fresh admissions less than a week after it passed from the NHS into private hands.

Poltair Hospital, near Penzance, was forced into the temporary move by shortages caused by the resignation of a member of the nursing team and staff illness.

The unit is one of 14 community hospitals in the county which exactly a week ago was taken over by Peninsula Community Health (PCH), a community interest company outside the NHS.

MP Andrew George, in whose St Ives consistency Poltair Hospital lies, said he was very disturbed by the development.

“This is not a very good start.

“I hope it is the community in whose interest this company is operating.

“To be a success, it has to be transparent and work with the community.”

Mr George, a member of the Commons Health Select Committee who campaigned against the transfer, added that it would not build confidence.

Kevin Baber, Chief Executive of PCH, a not-for-profit company, said the closure for new admissions was a purely temporary measure.

He said all the beds in the hospital were occupied, but until gaps in staffing were resolved, vacancies created when patients were discharged would not be filled.

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While the Con-Dem coalition government claims that there are no cuts to the NHS:


Conservative election poster 2010

A few recent news articles about the UK’s Conservative and Liberal-Democrat coalition government – the ConDem’s – brutal attack on the National Health Service.

NHS hospital asks staff to give up holiday or do unpaid work – Telegraph

Staff at an NHS hospital have been asked to give up their holiday time or work for nothing in a desperate attempt to save money.

Whipps Cross University Hospital Trust in east London has told doctors and nurses that it needs to take “extraordinary financial measures” to tackle its £4.5million deficit.

These include asking all of its 3,400 workers to voluntarily “sacrifice” part of their annual leave, take unpaid leave or perform “additional unpaid sessional duties”.

The hospitals’s executive team have all agreed to give up two days of their holiday entitlement while consultants are being asked to work one extra clinical shift every month.

It is a stark example of the financial pressures facing NHS organisations.

The overall health budget is falling in real terms while trusts have been told to make efficiency savings totalling £20billion by 2015.

All trusts are expected to reach semi-independent Foundation Trust status by 2013, which means balancing their books, while their income is likely to fall as the NHS is opened up to more competition.

In the letter to staff, Whipps Cross’s chief executive, Cathy Geddes, wrote: “As you all know the Trust is facing unprecedented and demanding financial challenges in 2011/12 and beyond. Therefore, it is imperative that we take all necessary steps and make concerted efforts to ensure we work towards the achievement of our financial, and all other, targets.

“To this end, and in light of our month five financial results (£4.5m actual deficit) you will be aware that the Trust has now launched extra-ordinary financial measures.

“As part of these measures we have asked staff if they are willing to volunteer to sacrifice annual leave and/or perform additional unpaid sessional duties. In true Whipps Cross spirit many of you have already rallied to this request and kindly offered to help.

“I would also like to stress that any such sacrifice will be a one-off in 2011/12 and will NOT commit anyone on an on-going basis or change anyone’s terms and conditions of employment.”

BBC News – NHS cuts: Managers urge government honesty

Health service managers have called on the government to be more honest about the financial challenges facing the NHS in England.

The NHS Confederation says a lack of candour over funding is damaging as the public may resist a service being cut.

One trust chief executive said ministers were not being straight with the public: “What people cannot tolerate is the lack of honesty about some of the tough choices that we’re having to make.

“Wrapping it up in a language of modernisation and patient choice is simply unacceptable.”

Another said: “Many chief executives – just about all that I speak to, believe that we’re living in a parallel universe.”

NHS cuts prolonging wait for physiotherapy patients, survey finds | Society | guardian.co.uk

Fewer getting timely physiotherapy treatment and most have to wait for months, says Chartered Society of Physiotherapists

Patients needing NHS physiotherapy are waiting up to six months to be treated, receiving fewer sessions and having their pain prolonged due to cost-cutting and staff shortages, a new report warns today[fri].

The NHS’s financial squeeze means access to physiotherapy is declining despite rising demand from those with sore backs, necks and shoulders, according to the Chartered Society of Physiotherapists (CSP).

The longest waits for treatment are in West Sussex, where waiting time is between four and 27 weeks, CSP’s audit of 115 NHS primary care trusts across England revealed.

But in South Tyneside and Gateshead, patients were assessed by a physiotherapist within two working days of referral and had their first appointment in no more than three weeks.

The average wait across England is 11.8 weeks, found the survey, which uncovered “significant variations in how physiotherapy services are commissioned and funded”.

More than 4 million patients a year receive physiotherapy on the NHS, particularly those with a musculo-skeletal disorder such as arthritis or long-term conditions such as cystic fibrosis, or those who have had a stroke. Treatment plays an important role in keeping some people well enough to be able to continue working.

“Despite the cost savings to the NHS and the benefits to patients that physiotherapy can deliver, the CSP has discovered that physiotherapy services across the UK are currently being reduced, and this is having a negative impact on the quality of care for patients,” the CSP warns in its report ‘Stretched to the limit’.

More patients will end up being readmitted to hospital if they are denied the physiotherapy they need to recover properly due to increasing rationing prompted by the need to save £20bn from the budget of the NHS in England by 2015, it adds.

Addition 10.45 a.m.

Patients Association comments on NHS Confederation warning about cuts.

Patients Association comments on NHS Confederation warning about cuts.

Katherine Murphy, Chief Executive of the Patients Association said

“For months we have been speaking out about the cuts that the Department of Health continue to deny are happening. We know from patients phoning our Helpline and research we carried out earlier this year that thousands of patients are having to wait longer for operations, tests and results. Long waiting times and cancelled operations are the number one reason patients are phoning our Helpline. Patients are also being left to suffer as procedures that could help them are being denied to them, including hip replacements and knee operations. When the NHS was asked to make £20 billion worth of savings we were concerned that frontline services might suffer, but patients were promised that these “efficiency savings” would not affect patient care. But now we have NHS Managers speaking out about the cuts saying they are putting patients at risk. It is telling that the Government continue to try to hide behind the idea that these are “efficiency savings” and cannot admit that they are cuts. Patient safety and wellbeing  is being put at risk, and definitive action must be taken now to end this crisis. The Department must ensure that they are always putting patients first.”

 

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Dave Prentis, UNISON General Secretary responds to Cameron’s Tory Party conferennce speech: “And health workers and patients up and down the country will not be fooled by his warm words on the health service. They know you can’t trust the Tories on the NHS.”

BMA renews it’s call for the Destroy the NHS / Health and Social Care bill to be rejected.

NHS ‘Big Weekend’ this weekend.

Conservative election poster 2010

A few recent news articles about the UK’s Conservative and Liberal-Democrat coalition government – the ConDem’s – brutal attack on the National Health Service.

UNISON Press | Press Releases Front Page

UNISON, the UK’s largest union, said today that David Cameron’s speech showed just how out of touch he is with hardworking people and their families. The union said he was wrong on the economy, wrong on the NHS, and wrong on public sector pensions.

Dave Prentis, UNISON General Secretary, said:

“David Cameron is out of touch with the reality of many working people’s lives. Thousands of families in the UK struggle to make ends meet, and many of them are worried about losing their jobs. Millions are out of work, with young people hit especially hard. This speech offers them no hope at all.

“And he is wrong to say that it’s fair to make public sector workers work longer and pay more for their pensions. There is no public sector pensions crisis – the schemes don’t need this drastic change. Government ministers’ plans are just an extra tax on public sector workers to pay down the deficit.

“While ordinary, hardworking families shoulder a huge burden for the crisis, bankers are still making off with billions in bonuses.

“And health workers and patients up and down the country will not be fooled by his warm words on the health service. They know you can’t trust the Tories on the NHS.”

BMA renews call for Health Bill withdrawal | GPonline.com

The BMA has approached the House of Lords in a renewed call for the Health Bill to be withdrawn.

In a letter to peers BMA chairman Dr Hamish Meldrum warned that the Bill still ‘poses an unacceptably high risk to the NHS in England’.

The BMA has sent letters and briefing papers to the every peer in the House Lords calling for the Bill to be withdrawn or substantially amended. Debate in the Lords begins on Tuesday.

Dr Meldrum said that the Bill will ‘make it harder to create the seamless, efficient care that everyone agrees is key to future sustainability.’

The BMA still had concerns over the lack of clarity on how the plans would be implemented, Dr Meldrum said.

He described reforms as ‘most radical restructuring of the NHS in a generation’, particularly in light of the rapid rollout taking place before the legislation has been enacted.

The Lords must address the need for an explicit provision that the health secretary will retain ultimate responsibility for the provision of comprehensive health services, the BMA said.

House of Lords Business (Thursday 6 October 2011 at 11.00am)

Health and Social Care Bill Second Reading [Earl Howe] 18th Report from the Constitution Committee

†Lord Rea to move, as an amendment to the motion that the bill be now read a second time, to leave out from “that” to the end and insert “this House declines to give the bill a second reading, in the light of the statement in the Coalition Agreement that we will stop the top-down reorganisations of the NHS that have got in the way of patient care.”

UNISON News | The public service union | UNISON prepares for Big Weekend in defence of NHS

UNISON members will be among those defending the NHS this weekend, as the House of Lords prepares to debate the government’s controversial shake-up of the health service.

They will be joining other trade union and Labour Party members for the NHS Big Weekend, organising street stalls, petitions and NHS-themed door-knocking across the country. The aim is to send a message to Tory and Lib-Dem MPs that they need to think again about their plans to destroy the NHS.

It’s also hoped that the NHS Big Weekend will make an impression on the House of Lords, which meets on Tuesday 11 October for the second reading of the health and social care bill. This precedes closer scrutiny of the bill by peers, which could continue for some weeks.

“We feel that the Lords will be a key moment in the life of this bill,” said UNISON national secretary for health Christina McAnea. “There are strong indications that peers are not happy with the bill and will try to amend it.”

The union believes that the bill should be scrapped in its entirety, as it presents real dangers for the future of the NHS, including a wholesale move towards competition and private providers.

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