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Conservative election poster 2010

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

Cuts affect vital community mental health supporting Epsom and Ewell (From Your Local Guardian)

The workforce providing vital NHS mental health care services in Epsom and Ewell will be slashed by half.

Fifteen out of 30 community support roles in Epsom and Ewell will go as part of a radical shake-up, which will see Surrey and Borders Partnership NHS trust target services for those with the most severe or complex illnesses.

This is in addition to 30 posts already vacant across Surrey. It is part of a wider plan to save the trust £1.5m.

CROWDS of doctors, nurses and trade unionists marched through Canterbury city centre on Saturday to protest about proposed cuts to the NHS.

CROWDS of doctors, nurses and trade unionists marched through Canterbury city centre on Saturday to protest about proposed cuts to the NHS.

Almost 100 people with banners and megaphones, including members campaign group Stop The Cuts, mingled among shoppers and chanted: “No ifs, no buts, no NHS cuts.”

Chris Weller, chairman of Stop The Cuts, warned “Local services are going to be devastated. In Kent, nine old peoples’ homes are shutting and 1,500 jobs are to be lost at the county council.

NHS chiefs struggle with cuts / Britain / Home – Morning Star

 

Government cuts are forcing NHS managers to worry more about balancing the books than improving patient care, the NHS Confederation warned today.

With the government forcing cuts of between £15 and £20 billion each year in the NHS, a poll by the NHS Confederation found 63 per cent of healthcare managers put balancing finances as one of the top three issues facing them this year. Thirty-one per cent said it was the most important issue.

Meanwhile 46 per cent put trying to maintain, protect and improve the quality of services in their three most important issues with 19 per cent putting it as the top priority.

NHS shakeup risks return to 1930s, warns leading doctor | Politics | The Guardian

The government’s deliberate dismantling of parts of the NHS risks returning healthcare provision back to the grim and unfair days of the 1930s and 40s, one of Britain’s leading doctors has warned.

The sweeping reforms are in danger of turning the service into “an increasingly tattered safety net” for those with complex illnesses such as diabetes and obesity because private healthcare firms will “cherry-pick” patients who are easy to treat, said Dr Mark Porter, the chairman of the British Medical Association’s hospital consultants committee.

Its ability to provide a comprehensive and universal service could be lost because of health secretary Andrew Lansley’s plan to force hospitals to compete with independent, profit-driven providers for patients, Porter told the Guardian.

Health bill means service will be forced to compete with private firms | Society | The Guardian

“There are things that people in Britain want provided by the state, and health is one of them. Every opinion poll of the British public shows that. We don’t want competing police forces or competing magistrates courts, so why is it planned to compel hospitals to compete with each other?” says Dr Mark Porter, chairman of the British Medical Association’s consultants committee.

He reflects the deep anxiety, not just in the BMA but across much of the wider medical establishment, about health secretary Andrew Lansley’s imposition of free-market methods in the NHS in England. If the health and social care bill, currently before the Commons, goes through without substantial amendment, then the NHS will be thrust into a new era in which “any willing provider” – NHS organisations, private healthcare firms or charities – can bid for contracts to treat patients. In addition, hospitals will be obliged to compete for patients and all hospitals will have to become foundation trusts, largely and deliberately outside the health secretary’s control, by 2014.

Porter is adamant that a healthcare system run on a deliberately competitive basis cannot deliver care of a universally high standard, as the NHS seeks to do. Winners and losers are inevitable. He draws a comparison between healthcare and food supply to illustrate what he sees as the folly of the government’s radical restructuring of the NHS.

Cuts put future of more than 50 hospitals at risk – Health News, Health & Families – The Independent

The future of at least 50 hospitals is under threat from the unprecedented squeeze on NHS finances, evidence shows.

Alarm about cuts to services outweighs all other concerns for senior managers of NHS trusts as they struggle to balance their books, the NHS Confederation says. Worries about finances far outstrip concerns about implementing the Government’s reforms, which some dismiss as a sideshow.

About 70 hospital trusts in England have failed to achieve the financial performance and quality of care necessary to become foundation trusts and “a significant number” have “large recurrent deficits”, according to the King’s Fund. In a report titled Reconfiguring Hospital Services the charity warned of “a downward spiral of falling income, growing deficit and declining quality [which] will cause hospitals to fail.”

Medical care: The non-national health service | Editorial | Society | The Guardian

The promise of the NHS was a simple guarantee: no matter who you were or where you lived in the country, it would be seen to that you got the best available care. Whenever standards fell short – whenever, in Aneurin Bevan’s phrase, a bedpan was dropped – the echoes would reverberate through Whitehall. Inevitably, there was always an element of myth here, as well as doubts about the centralism involved, but it was precisely by putting the national into the service that the Clement Attlee government removed the financial dimension from medical anxieties.

Mark Porter’s complaint is that the coalition is about to remove the N from the HS. After passing seven years in opposition ingratiating himself with the doctors, Andrew Lansley ought to pay attention to the chair of the BMA consultants’ committee. Damned as “Maoist” by the entrapped Vincent Cable, the big experiment planned will simultaneously attempt a once-and-for-all great leap forward, and a cultural revolution that will smash central authority. The known unknowns are legion. One of the few safe bets is that things will play out differently in different places.

Consider the planned diminution in the powers of Nice, the body established to inject rationality into the drug rationing process. Set aside the overhaul of drug-pricing, and the Lansley plan amounts to leaving GPs to decide whose pricey pills will and will not be funded. Their decisions are not going to be in any way “national”; indeed that is precisely the point. Even without the prospect of outright bidding wars for cheap operations (something Mr Lansley was recently forced to preclude), with the right financial engineering, some doctors may profit from saying no. The greatest hurricane is the proposed regulatory duty to promote competition from “any willing provider”.

Jeremy Laurance: Lansley faces landmark decision over NHS closures – Commentators, Opinion – The Independent

Andrew Lansley is to meet local MPs and the council in Enfield, north London, this week in what is being seen as a test case for hospital closures across the country. The Health Secretary has to decide whether to block plans approved by NHS London to close the A&E unit at Chase Farm Hospital, first proposed 17 years ago, and transfer maternity and children’s services to North Middlesex Hospital, six miles away.

He announced a moratorium on closures following the election, after Tory MPs opposed re-organisations across the country during the election campaign. There is now a pent-up bulge of at least 25 planned “reconfigurations”, and the decision on Chase Farm will signal to the NHS whether it can re-organise services to save cash and improve care.

The proposals for Chase Farm are deemed by NHS London to have met the “four tests” laid down by the Government: they are supported by patients and the public; they take account of patient choice; they are approved by local GPs; and they are based on sound clinical evidence. But there is continuing disquiet over a reduction in patient choice.

Andrew Lansley’s NHS reforms ‘will turn health service back to the 1930s’ | Mail Online

Plans to reform the NHS could return healthcare provision to the days of the 1930s and 40s, one of Britain’s leading doctors has warned.

Dr Mark Porter, chairman of the British Medical Association’s hospital consultants committee, criticised health secretary Andrew Lansley’s plan to make NHS hospitals compete with private companies.

Opening NHS care in England to ‘any willing provider’ could result in the closure of local hospitals and see some patients denied care by private providers because they are expensive to treat, he said.

Management in Practice – Biggest NHS challenge ‘balancing books’

The biggest challenge to NHS managers comes from money-saving measures and balancing the books, a new study has found.

Just under 300 health service chairmen and senior executives said their main concern was keeping their trusts stable in a financial sense.

The NHS has been told to cut between £15bn and £20bn each year from its budget, with unions warning this will mean as many as 50,000 job cuts.

7/3/11 Update.

A special mention for Dr. Grumble. Nice post Dr. Grumble and interesting what the cat found. I wish my local authority would pay attention to what you’re saying about parks and green spaces instead of desperately trying to sell off and cover everything in concrete.

Dr Grumble: One Policy fits all

Dr Grumble has a Japanese doctor working with him. His name is Ren. The other day he asked Dr Grumble why there are so many parks in London. According to Ren, there are no parks in Tokyo. A quick Google search suggests that this might not quite be true and a look at Google maps seems to show a few patches of green in Tokyo. But a comparison with a map of London suggests that we do have much more green space. Ren asked why. Dr Grumble had to think on his feet. He told Ren it was to do with common land. Ren’s face looked blank. Perhaps they don’t have such a concept in Japan. Grumble needed a more understandable explanation. Quickly he made up a story about the king needing somewhere to go hunting. Ren nodded. That was something he could grasp.
Recently Dr Grumble went to his local forest to protest. He didn’t want to risk the sale of the woods near his home to a private company. A forest is not worth much. Not as a forest anyway. But if you could sell it to be used for something else it would be worth quite a bit more. So, if the local wood were to fall into the hands of a private company, the shareholders would want to make money out of it. You can be sure that they would chip away at any regulations preventing them from doing this. They might not succeed tomorrow or in five years or in ten years but the woods need to be preserved forever. The likelihood is that repeated planning applications would eventually be met with approval for the odd plot of land to be sold off for, say, housing. In this way, bit by bit, over many years the woods would disappear. Once gone they would be gone forever.


A London park which belongs to the community.

Over the years how many people have fought for the green spaces in London? Dr Grumble has no idea. One thing is certain: if it had been left to the market the green spaces in London would have gone long ago. People out to make money have been been prevented from concreting over our parks and commons. That’s why Grumble did his bit for posterity and protested in the woods.

And who knows? Maybe our London parks have made us money. Maybe that is partly why Japanese tourists like to visit London. Maybe the quality of life our parks and gardens bring even attracts bankers to London. Perhaps even they realise that there is more to life than money. We cannot know. And it doesn’t matter. What matters is that we need these green spaces because we like them and governments have a duty to protect things of value to society especially when, once those things are gone, they are gone forever.

… [continues]

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Conservative election poster 2010

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

British Medical Association Welcomes Government Concessions On NHS Competition

The BMA has welcomed a commitment from the government that it will not allow healthcare providers to compete for NHS contracts on the basis of price.

The government has laid amendments to the Health and Social Care Bill for England, changing the sections which would have made it possible for providers to bid for contracts at a price below the standard NHS tariff. The changes will also prevent the possibility of differential pricing between NHS and private providers.

‘Privatisation’ fears for NHS – Community – Pontefract Express

I AM a retired general practitioner having worked in Airedale for over 25 years.

The coalition government’s plan for the NHS could spell disaster for our local health services. The health and social care bill is going through parliament at the moment and its policies represent the biggest change to the NHS since it was founded in 1948. These changes will affect every patient in Pontefract and Castleford.

Our hospitals will be made into independent businesses and will be free to treat private patients possibly first and taking up precious beds.

BBC News – Isle of Wight to cut 600 NHS jobs

About 600 NHS Isle of Wight jobs out of a workforce of 3,000 (20%) could be lost over the next four years.

Health managers said they needed to make savings of up to £14m a year in order to safeguard essential services.

In a statement NHS Isle of Wight said future redundancies could not be ruled out if savings targets cannot be met through cost saving measures.

HealthInvestor – Article: NHS chief denies privatisation aim

Privatisation is not the motive behind the planned reforms of the NHS, the health service’s chief executive has said.

Speaking to GP magazine, Sir David Nicholson said: “’I wouldn’t want to be part of something that privatises the NHS.”

Instead, he suggested that the Health and Social Care Bill aims to “open up doors that haven’t been opened up before” in a bid to improve the quality of services.

NHS reform: regulation is ‘slack’ – Channel 4 News

Doctors are worried that NHS reforms do not include enough checks and balances to make sure patients are getting the best service, Channel 4 News understands.

The British Medical Association Council Chairman Hamish Meldrum told Channel 4 News: “It’s a real concern. We do support the idea of doctors getting more involved but not on an unmonitored basis. We do worry that some of the governance and oversight provisions in the bill are a bit slack.

“We had our issues with Primary Care Trusts [the bodies which currently commission care], but at least they were a local oversight who could step in if there were problems.”

Liberal Democrat rebels to challenge Clegg over ‘damaging’ NHS reforms | Society | The Guardian

Nick Clegg is facing possible defeat over the government’s NHS changes at his spring party conference next weekend when a heavyweight group of Liberal Democrat figures table an amendment opposing the “damaging and unjustified market-based approach”.

Evan Harris, a doctor and former MP and vice-chair of the party’s ruling federal policy committee, will table the amendment, supported by the former cabinet minister Lady Williams, registering their concerns that the current legislation will lead to a widening of UK health inequalities if left unchecked.

The government is proposing to give GPs control of more than 80% of the £100bn NHS budget at the same time as driving through efficiency savings of £20bn. The package includes the abolition of primary care trusts.

Cuts affect vital community mental health supporting Epsom and Ewell (From Your Local Guardian)

The workforce providing vital NHS mental health care services in Epsom and Ewell will be slashed by half.

Fifteen out of 30 community support roles in Epsom and Ewell will go as part of a radical shake-up, which will see Surrey and Borders Partnership NHS trust target services for those with the most severe or complex illnesses.

This is in addition to 30 posts already vacant across Surrey. It is part of a wider plan to save the trust £1.5m.

Patients at risk as NHS orders ‘ghost list’ purge | Mail Online

Thousands of patients face being removed from GP practices if they have not seen their doctor for six months.

After this time, if they fail to respond to two warning letters, their names will be removed from the surgery register.

NHS managers say they want to ensure lists are accurate and up to date.

But GPs claim many patients will be struck off without reason and then forced to re-register when they need to see a doctor.

CROWDS of doctors, nurses and trade unionists marched through Canterbury city centre on Saturday to protest about proposed cuts to the NHS.

CROWDS of doctors, nurses and trade unionists marched through Canterbury city centre on Saturday to protest about proposed cuts to the NHS.

Almost 100 people with banners and megaphones, including members campaign group Stop The Cuts, mingled among shoppers and chanted: “No ifs, no buts, no NHS cuts.”

Chris Weller, chairman of Stop The Cuts, warned “Local services are going to be devastated. In Kent, nine old peoples’ homes are shutting and 1,500 jobs are to be lost at the county council.

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Conservative election poster 2010

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

GPs used NHS commissioning surplus to fund basic practice costs and alternative medicine | News | Nursing Times

GPs have been able to boost their take-home pay by using commissioning funds rather than their general contractors’ income to buy basic medical equipment and fund practice refurbishments, an investigation by Nursing Times’ sister title has revealed.

Health Service Journal’s analysis shows almost £1m of commissioning surpluses generated through practice based commissioning were spent on basic general practice kit such as stethoscopes, otoscopes and waiting room chairs.

Surpluses were also spent on controversial complementary therapies, including aromatherapy and homeopathy.

Level of concern over NHS ‘reforms’ is becoming deafening, says Unite

The crescendo of concern over the ill-judged NHS reforms is becoming deafening, Unite, the largest union in the country, said today (Thursday 3 March).

Unite was commenting as the think tank, the Kings Fund, said that government plans to give more power over NHS decision making in England to GPs could make hospital reform difficult, and an online survey for the British Medical Association (BMA) suggested that the vast majority of doctors are not convinced that potential benefits of the government’s plans for the NHS in England outweigh the risks.

Unite general secretary, Len McCluskey, said: ”The evidence is mounting at an alarming rate from respected health organisations that the so-called reforms outlined in the Health and Social Care bill are ill-judged and badly thought out.

New Statesman – The coalition’s NHS U-turn

Two weeks ago, when I listed the coalition’s ten biggest U-turns, I suggested that the NHS was next in line. “The smart money is on the government watering down its reforms,” I wrote.

Sure enough, Andrew Lansley has announced a major U-turn over NHS price competition. The Health Secretary is planning to amend his own bill to prevent providers from charging a maximum, as opposed to a fixed, price for treatment. In other words, the private sector will not be handed free rein to offer temporary loss leaders and undercut the NHS.

The NHS Operating Framework, published in December, stated that hospitals would be free to offer services to commissioners “at less than the published mandatory tariff price”. But Lansley now tells the Financial Times: “We want the tariff to be a nationally regulated price, not a starting point for price competition. These amendments will put our intentions beyond doubt.”

It takes some chutzpah for him to claim that he never wanted to introduce price competition in the first place, but the U-turn should be welcomed all the same. As studies by the LSE and Imperial have shown, the limited experiment with price competition during the Major government led to a decline in standards of care.

UNISON Press | Press Releases Front Page

Commenting on Health Secretary, Andrew Lansley’s u-turn on introducing price competition into the NHS, Karen Jennings, Head of Health for UNISON said:

“In a remarkable u-turn Andrew Lansley has publically stated that price competition is not now a part of the Government’s plans for the NHS – a victory for common sense.

“UNISON wants this promise delivered, by making sure that NHS guidance reflects the policy change. The Government should have the operating framework amended to make it clear that there should be no price competition.

NHS reform could ‘destroy patient-doctor trust’ – Channel 4 News

A Channel 4 News investigation on Wednesday revealed that the NHS reforms could see GPs making decisions based on profit rather than the clinical needs of the patient.

While the Department of Health stressed that the potential conflict of interests would be managed, patient groups told Channel 4 News their concerns that this may not be the case.

Katherine Murphy, Chief Executive of the Patients Association, told Channel 4 News: “When the Government first announced its reform plan my first comment was on my concerns that there would be a conflict of interest. Now it is clear that those concerns were justified.

Out of hours care ”cut” in 25 per cent of trusts – Public Service

Even before the NHS has to achieve £20bn of savings, around 25 per cent of trusts are said to have cut their out of hours care services in their 2010/2011 budgets.

According to reports, roughly 20 of England’s 152 primary care trusts have cut a total of £4m off the money they pay out for evening and weekend services provided by GPs. In other trusts spending in this area went up by £3.6m.

Katherine Murphy, chief executive of the Patients’ Association, said the cuts could affect the level of care provided by GPs.

CAMPAIGNERS are stepping up opposition to controversial plans to ‘privatise’ NHS healthcare provision in Plymouth.

CAMPAIGNERS are stepping up opposition to controversial plans to ‘privatise’ NHS healthcare provision in Plymouth.

Unison is urging people to support its Say No to Social Enterprise campaign.

The union is holding a meeting at Stonehouse Creek on March 8 to highlight issues and raise awareness of the changes under way.

600 face axe from hospital

MORE than 600 health jobs are set to be axed as bosses at NHS Isle of Wight struggle to plug a massive £40 million black hole in their finances brought about by government spending cuts.
The jobs bombshell was dropped by NHS Isle of Wight chief executive, Kevin Flynn.
Speaking exclusively to the County Press, he revealed the equivalent of between 150 and 170 posts a year are set to go over the next four years as heath chiefs fight to bring down costs.

Fears for patient care as NHS reforms proposed – Today’s News – News – JournalLive

ALMOST 90% of doctors in the North East think increasing competition in the NHS will lead to services being fragmented, a new poll has revealed.

Some 62% believe competition between providers, including NHS and private companies, will reduce the quality of patient care, while 56% think the Government’s reforms mean they will spend less time with patients.

The survey was carried out in January, with 400 North East BMA members completing it.

Support for cut-threat hospice gathers pace – Health – lep.co.uk

Hospices today spoke out in a defiant united front against NHS cuts to funding.

It follows the Evening Post’s revelations that St Catherine’s Hospice in Lostock Hall, near Preston, is facing a cut in funding from primary care trust NHS Central Lancashire.

St Catherine’s Hospice, which provides a variety of services for seriously ill patients and their families, raises the bulk of the £4.6m a year it needs through public donations and fundraising.

The PCT stumps up 29%, £1.3m, but is now proposing to cut this by 1.5% compared to last year’s budget – a reduction in funding of about £19,500.

Lansley agrees to change Health Bill to prevent price competition | GP online

Health secretary Andrew Lansley has agreed to change the sections of the Health and Social Care Bill which would make it possible for providers to bid for contracts at a price below the standard NHS tariff.

He said the amendments will ‘put our intentions beyond doubt, sort out the confusion which we inherited from Labour, and put an end to the scaremongering we have seen.’ The DoH’s plans ‘have always been about competition on quality, not on price,’ he said.

BMA chairman Dr Hamish Meldrum said the health secretary has ‘not only listened to doctors’ views, but also acted on them.’

‘Price competition has been linked with lower quality and was of huge concern to the BMA and many others. There is of course still a long way to go to address all the concerns doctors have about the Bill, such as Monitor’s powers to enforce competition. We will continue to press for further improvements and hope the government will continue to listen.’

Petition against ward closure is handed in to NHS – 100 in 100 Apprenticeship campaign – The News

A 10,000-signature petition against the closure of an end-of-life care ward has been delivered to hospital bosses.

Campaigner Will Purvis, from the Save G5 Campaign Group, handed over five folders’ worth of signatures to Portsmouth Hospitals NHS Trust board members during a board meeting at Queen Alexandra Hospital, Cosham, yesterday.

He said: ‘It was always the intention to give the petition to the hospital trust board.

‘I hope that they will take note of it and the 10,000 people who signed it.

NHS Short Of Specialist Staff Despite Cuts, Says Medical Recruiter, UK

Despite major cuts to front line services in the NHS, the health service is still short of specialist medical staff. That’s the message from the new white paper on the medical employment market from Your World Recruitment, who also warns that the government must be careful not to store up problems for the future of the NHS.

The report reveals that although cuts across the board in the healthcare sector have led to a decline in medical jobs across the UK, at the same time there are still a number of opportunities out there, especially for GPs, nurses and other medical experts with very specialist skills. These skill shortages include cochlear implant specialists within audiology, paediatric occupational therapists and MRI / ultrasound experts within radiology. Although pay levels have frozen for many, certain jobs or hospitals that are struggling to find talent are driving up remuneration to attract the right people.

The white paper also tells of the increasing number of locum healthcare staff moving into permanent positions, mainly due to the increased job security in what is a challenging time for the public sector. With less jobs, longer waiting lists and less locums to fill temporary positions when hospitals get busy, Your World is warning that investment in staff needs to continue in order to avoid future problems and staff shortages.

NHS prescription charges to rise by 20p | Society | guardian.co.uk

The cost of prescriptions in England will rise to £7.40 per item from £7.20, the government has announced.

The move will come as a blow to campaigners, including the British Medical Association (BMA), who have been calling for charges to be scrapped altogether.

The Department of Health has also announced that dental charges will rise.

England is the only part of the UK still charging for prescriptions. They are free in Wales and Northern Ireland and will be free in Scotland from 1 April.

GPs say reforms will damage doctor-patient relationship, BMA poll finds | GP online

The wide-ranging poll highlights a number of serious concerns among GPs about the reforms, particularly around the impact of GP commissioning on patient care and the drive to increase competition in the NHS.

The BMA said it shows that the government can no longer claim widespread support among doctors for the reforms. It urged the government to act on the concerns raised by doctors.

The survey, which was carried out by Ipsos MORI, showed 72% think GP commissioning will damage the GP-patient relationship.

Cuts blamed as Lib Dems slump to sixth in vote | Reuters

(Reuters) – The Liberal Democrats said on Friday they were paying the price for a tough economic stance after plunging to sixth place in a northern election.

The Lib Dems had come second in May’s general election in the former mining town of Barnsley, just ahead of the Conservatives in a seat long held by Labour.

However, this time they came a humiliating sixth, behind the anti-EU UKIP, who pushed the Conservatives into third, the far-right BNP and an independent. Labour won comfortably despite their former MP being jailed for fiddling his expenses.

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Conservative election poster 2010

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

Doctors against NHS reforms – politics.co.uk

Over half of doctors oppose the government’s NHS reforms, according to a survey from the British Medical Association (BMA).

Research compiled by Ipsos Mori found that 89% of doctors thought the measures would lead to a fragmentation of services, while 65% said the quality of patient care would be reduced as a result.

A further two-thirds of doctors said they believed the reforms would increase health inequalities.

Nearly 90pc of doctors fearful of Government’s NHS changes – Top stories – Yorkshire Post

The vast majority of doctors fear the risks of controversial NHS reform plans outweigh the potential benefits, a poll reveals today.

The survey of 1,600 doctors found 89 per cent believed increased competition would fragment services and two-thirds said it would reduce the quality of patient care.

Two-thirds also said giving control of £80bn in NHS spending to GPs would increase health inequalities and 60 per cent feared they would spend less time with patients.

Patients at risk as health trusts trim out-of-hours care – Telegraph

The cutbacks have prompted warnings that services will suffer and patients put at risk.

At least 20 trusts have reduced their budgets for doctors to visit patients in the evenings and at weekends by a total of £4million.

The cuts in after-hours budgets led to warnings of a repeat of the case of Daniel Ubani, the incompetent German locum who killed a Cambridgeshire man with a morphine overdose in 2008.

Doctors think reforms will reduce NHS quality

Nearly nine out of ten doctors think increasing competition in the NHS will lead to services being fragmented, according to a poll.

Some 65 per cent believe competition between providers, including NHS and private companies, will reduce the quality of patient care, while 61 per cent think the Government’s reforms mean they will spend less time with patients.

Most doctors believe NHS reforms will lead to increased competition but only one in five think they will improve care.

New Statesman – The NHS is Britain’s beating heart – don’t let it flatline

I have hazy memories of my parents getting their first telephone. It was the late 1960s, and telecommunications was a public service. There was a waiting list but, in time, we got to the head of the queue. An engineer from the General Post Office installed the necessary equipment and we were connected – or at least, connected any time our neighbours weren’t using their phone: ours was a “party line”. I don’t recall any grumbles about the tortuousness of the process, nor about having to share with the people next door. The sense of wonder at what was now possible must have mitigated any frustration. It was marvellous to be able to speak to relatives and friends from the comfort of home, without having to trudge to the phone box.

The National Health Service was viewed in much the same way. My father developed cancer when I was two years old. He was swiftly cured but irrevocably damaged, and he struggled thereafter with chronic ill-health. His illnesses had knock-on effects on various members of our family, myself included. Between us we saw a lot of the NHS. At the centre of it (to my eyes) was our GP, a good-hearted man with half-moon glasses and a somewhat distant manner. When he needed expert assistance, a referral would be made. Waiting times were sometimes long but were accepted with stoicism: the professionals we eventually saw did their best. Looking back, I recognise the profound comfort in those experiences for my parents, who had grown up knowing what medical care could be like – and its financial implications – before the advent of the NHS. No matter how threatening or scary things got, no matter what time of day or night, this health service was there to help and asked nothing in return.

In the mid-1980s, I entered medical school in Nottingham. Like most aspiring doctors, I knew what I was going to be: a public servant, working extremely long and often antisocial hours, the whole arduous endeavour sustained by a powerful sense of doing something important and worthwhile. I would be joining an unquestionable force for good, grouped under the fluttering blue-and-white standard of the NHS.

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Conservative election poster 2010

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

Doctors Think NHS Reforms Bring More Risks Than Benefits, With High Levels Of Concern About Increased Competition, Shows Ipsos MORI Survey For BMA, UK

The vast majority of doctors are not convinced that potential benefits of the government’s plans for the NHS in England outweigh the risks, an online survey for the BMA suggests today (Thursday 3 March 2011). An Ipsos MORI survey of BMA members, carried out in January this year, reveals a range of views, but widespread concern about plans to increase competition, even among the minority of doctors who are generally supportive of the changes.

The statements garnering the highest levels of agreement among the 1,645 respondents are:

* Increased competition in the NHS will lead to a fragmentation of services (89% agree)
* Increased competition in the NHS will reduce the quality of patient care (65% agree)
* The move for all NHS providers to become, or be part of, foundation trusts will damage NHS values (66% agree)
* The proposed system of clinician-led commissioning will increase health inequalities (66% agree)

Doctors fear private sector will damage NHS | Healthcare Network | Guardian Professional

Research involving 1,645 BMA members polled about the government’s health and social care bill has found that 89% think increased competition will lead to fragmentation of services, while 66% believe that the move for all NHS acute providers to reside within foundation trusts will damage NHS values.

The poll, conducted online in January by Ipsos Mori, also shows that nearly 60% of those surveyed think health secretary Andrew Lansley’s plans will have a negative impact on their personal role within the NHS, with 31% saying it will be a major one and 27% saying it will be minor. A specific concern, feared by a majority of those polled, is that the reforms will mean they spend less time with patients – something opposed by almost all those questioned.

Dr Hamish Meldrum, chairman of council at the BMA, said that the results show that the government “can no longer claim widespread support among doctors”.

Andreas Whittam Smith: Wholesale privatisation is not what people voted for – Andreas Whittam Smith, Commentators – The Independent

A White Paper with a simple title that disguises a development of huge significance is due any day now. It will be called “Open Public Services”. In reality it is a plan to privatise many government functions. And the question that arises is this: were the political parties that comprise the Coalition Government given a mandate to make such dramatic changes at the general election held only 10 months ago?

The key part of the legislation that the White Paper foreshadows would be the establishment of a presumption that public services should be open to a range of providers competing to offer a better service. In other words, any supplier that could show the Government that it could do a better job than the state would get the business. Only national security and the judiciary would be exempt from the possibility of privatisation.

Would it work like this? “Dear Health Minister. We are a group of brain surgeons that have secured funding for constructing a state-of-the art neurological hospital in outer London. We would like to take over all neurological procedures from the NHS in South-east England. Yours etc.”

Doctors blast David Cameron’s ‘flawed’ NHS reforms – mirror.co.uk

GPs have branded the Tory-led Government’s health reforms as “flawed” and damaging to patients.

Almost 90% believe the changes will fragment the NHS and 65% think it will harm service quality.

Almost nine out of 10 told a British Medical Association poll the reforms will lead to greater competition. Just 21% thought this would benefit patients. A further 61% believe they will have less time for the sick because of increased bureaucracy.

One in four NHS trusts slash out-of-hours care budgets | Mail Online

A quarter of health trusts have slashed spending on GP out-of-hours care, raising fears that patient safety is being put at risk.

Doctors said the cuts almost certainly mean managers are reducing the number of GPs employed to work nights or weekends.

Trusts are also likely to be more inclined to use cheaper, foreign locums rather than experienced GPs from the local area who often demand higher pay.

UNISON Press | Press Releases Front Page

Commenting on Monitor’s warning to Tameside NHS Trust over its spending, after the regulator found the Trust to be in “significant breach” of its terms, Paul Foley, regional officer for the North West, said:

“Tameside Trust’s debt proves how hard the NHS is being hit by the Government’s financial squeeze. Bankruptcy is a real risk because of the Government’s savage health reforms.

“Tameside is one of the most deprived areas in the UK and has huge health problems. Monitor is only interested in Trusts making financial savings and fails to recognise the difficulties such communities suffer.

Privateers to get hold of GPs’ budget / Britain / Home – Morning Star

The real danger of NHS privatisation was laid bare today after plans emerged to set up a private company that would take control of GPs’ commissioning budget.

Private health firm IHP has outlined proposals for a consortium’s NHS commissioning budget to be handed over to a private company in which GPs would own a 20 per cent stake – leading to practices being partially floated on the stock market.

Under the Health and Social Care Bill, currently at committee stage in Parliament, GP consortiums will control £80 billion of NHS funds to commission to patients from 2013.

Leaked letter shows how GPs could profit from reform » Hospital Dr

A Channel 4 News investigation reveals that under the reforms of the NHS, GPs could end up making decisions based on profit rather than the clinical needs of the patient.

The NHS reforms plan to put up to 80% of the budget into the hands of family doctors. GP practices will form consortia and they will buy – or commission – the care.

It is widely acknowledged that not all GPs will want to run or manage the consortia. This means there is a business opportunity for private companies and already many are lining up to offer their services.

But a document leaked anonymously to Channel 4 News shows how one such company plans to work with GP consortia. What is startling about it is how it quite clearly sets out the way in which both the company, in this case called Integrated Health Partners, and the GPs, might make a profit.

Regulator warns NHS faces price competition | GP online

Speaking exclusively to GP, Monitor chairman David Bennett agreed that the Health Bill paves the way for providers to compete on price.

In a recent letter to NHS staff, the NHS chief executive said there was ‘no question’ of price competition in the NHS.

Mr Bennett, former head of policy for Tony Blair, became chairman of Monitor this week, having served as interim chief executive since March 2010. ‘I understand why people are nervous about price competition,’ he said. ‘But over time there will be areas where it is useful.’

Doctors reject reform of NHS – UK Politics, UK – The Independent

Ministers are facing a growing rebellion from doctors over their plans to reform the NHS.

A major online survey for the British Medical Association found most doctors were not convinced the potential benefits of the plan outweighed the risks. Of the 1,500 doctors questioned by Ipsos MORI, 65 per cent believed increased competition in the NHS would reduce the quality of patient care.

A similar percentage believed the proposed system of clinician-led commissioning would increase health inequalities.

GPs fear NHS funding policy could trigger MPs’ expenses-style scandals | Society | The Guardian

Britain’s most senior family doctor has warned of a potential scandal similar to the row over MPs’ expenses after an investigation revealed GP practices could boost their income by diverting cash meant for patients to pay instead for their surgeries and equipment.

The finding highlights a key concern about the government’s health bill – which nine out of 10 doctors now openly fear will damage the NHS – because £80bn of NHS spending is to be handed to doctors in general practice to buy treatments for patients.

Health Service Journal has examined trials of GP-led commissioning in the last two years. The magazine used a series of freedom of information requests to discover that, rather than using the funds to set up new services for patients, hundreds of practices used the cash to buy basic equipment for their surgeries, including stethoscopes, thermometers and weighing scales.

GPs say reforms will damage doctor-patient relationship, BMA poll finds | GP online

The wide-ranging poll highlights a number of serious concerns among GPs about the reforms, particularly around the impact of GP commissioning on patient care and the drive to increase competition in the NHS.

The BMA said it shows that the government can no longer claim widespread support among doctors for the reforms. It urged the government to act on the concerns raised by doctors.

The survey, which was carried out by Ipsos MORI, showed 72% think GP commissioning will damage the GP-patient relationship.

Doctors reject reform of NHS – UK Politics, UK – The Independent

Ministers are facing a growing rebellion from doctors over their plans to reform the NHS.

A major online survey for the British Medical Association found most doctors were not convinced the potential benefits of the plan outweighed the risks. Of the 1,500 doctors questioned by Ipsos MORI, 65 per cent believed increased competition in the NHS would reduce the quality of patient care.

A similar percentage believed the proposed system of clinician-led commissioning would increase health inequalities.

 

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
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