NHS news review

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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.

Cameron ‘has broken NHS promises’

Labour leader Ed Miliband is set to step up his attack on the Government’s NHS reforms, accusing Prime Minister David Cameron of breaking his promises on health.

During a visit to the Royal Bolton Hospital, in Greater Manchester, Mr Miliband will denounce the Government’s Health And Social Care Bill as “bad for the NHS” and repeat his call on the Prime Minister to scrap it.

More than 120,000 people have now signed an e-petition on a Government website calling for the dumping of the Bill, which has attracted opposition from health professionals and patients’ groups.

 

NHS bill will damage children’s health, say paediatricians

More than 150 paediatricians have signed a damning letter calling on the government to scrap its health and social care billMore than 150 paediatricians are calling on the government to scrap its controversial health bill, saying it will have an extremely damaging effect on the health of children.

In a damning letter to The Lancet medical journal, members of the UK’s Royal College of Paediatrics and Child Health said there was “no prospect” of improving the health and social care bill, which is going through parliament.

They accused the government of “misrepresenting” the bill as being something that was necessary for the NHS.

The signatories join several royal medical colleges, including the Royal College of General Practitioners and the Royal College of Radiologists, in calling for the bill to be scrapped.

The move will put increasing pressure on the government over the reforms, which have come under repeated fire from healthcare professionals.

Unions, including the British Medical Association, the Royal College of Nursing, and the Royal College of Midwives, are among those calling for the bill to be withdrawn.

Friday’s letter said that “if passed, we believe that the bill will have an extremely damaging effect on the healthcare of children and their families, and their access to high quality, effective services”.

It added: “We see no prospect for improvement to the bill sufficient to safeguard the rights of access to healthcare by children and their families.

Market-based healthcare is the wrong prescription for the NHS

The health and social care bill proposes a system that will destroy all the advantages of the centrally planned NHS

by Andy Burnham, shadow Minister for Health

By framing this debate in terms of competition, the prime minister is not just choosing the wrong policy prescription for the NHS; it is potentially catastrophic for his entire political project. This is the man who used the NHS to pose as a different kind of Tory. He promised to protect it and spare it from upheaval. In taking a different course, and arguing for a market, he is taking a huge gamble. There is still time to turn back. For Labour, it is to our political advantage if the PM digs in behind his health secretary and his bill – effectively guaranteeing that the NHS will be a major political issue at the next election. But, even so, I’m sure I speak for the nearly all members of the Labour party in saying that we hope the prime minister sees sense at the eleventh hour and drops the bill. In the final analysis, the NHS matters more to this party than our own electoral self-interest.

Government urged to return to NHS pension talks or face action

 

The BMA has requested an urgent meeting with the chief secretary to the Treasury in a further effort to re-start talks with the government on changes to the NHS pension scheme.

The BMA is seeking a fairer offer after 46,000 doctors and medical students responded to a survey last month, with 84% rejecting the government’s current plans which include raising the normal pension age for NHS staff.

Nearly two thirds said they would be prepared to take industrial action if the government does not improve its offer. In recent exchanges, the health secretary indicated that there would be no movement in the Department of Health’s position.

Under the government’s plans to reform the NHS pension scheme doctors’ retirement age would increase to 68; there would be a move from a final salary pension scheme to one based on career average earnings; and there would be an increase in contributions for senior doctors from 8.5% up to 14.5% by 2014.

In the letter, the BMA points out that the NHS pension is in a very different situation from other public sector schemes, having been radically overhauled less than four years ago.

“It is in good financial health, and currently provides £2billion to the Treasury every year,” it says. “In addition, the cost-sharing agreement reached at the time ensured that any increase in contributions needed in the future would be met by employees, not the taxpayer.”

The letter highlights the unfairness of NHS staff paying twice as much for the same pensions as some other public sector workers on similar salaries. It quotes the Public Accounts Committee’s warning that the government’s proposals “could destabilise the largest public sector pension scheme, increasing the burden on the state, and creating problems with retention of senior staff”

Related: BMA may ballot over pensions

 

 

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Hmm, thinks on the NHS and politics generally

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I’ve not really formulated my thoughts but I’m thinking along the lines that engaging in conventional politics is entering into negotiation and bestowing an undeserved legitimacy on the current political agenda.

David Cameron and Nick Clegg have their positions of power and are abusing their positions of power based on outright lies – deliberate deceptions. Instead of engaging with them and their excessively offensive policies shouldn’t they be rejected outright as illegitimate? Instead of engaging in their discourse, shouldn’t it be an outright rejection? Shouldn’t the response to attempts to destroy the NHS, unnecessary austerity, quantitive easing continuing to fill the pockets of rich bankers and traders, militarism and invasions be far more radical?

16/2/12 17.45 edit: attacks on disability benefits, privatization of education.

 

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NHS news ~ People being drunk is a ‘scandal’ insists man dismantling the NHS

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People being drunk is a ‘scandal’ insists man dismantling the NHS

David Cameron has announced plans to address the ‘national scandal’ of people drinking more than he’d like, just as soon as he’s finished his non-scandalous dismantling of the NHS.

Cameron will use a speech today to outline why everyone should be angry at people drinking exactly as much as they want to, instead if his team of shady operatives trying to break up just about the only thing this country should be proud of.

As one drinker explained, “Does the man not own a dictionary?”

“I mean, how is me drinking precisely what I want a ‘scandal’, yet forcing through the least popular NHS legislation in a generation which will change forever an institution that is the envy of the world, is not?”

Another said, “Look, I wasn’t very happy about the changes he’s making to the NHS, but let me be very clear – if he comes for my booze he’s a dead man.”

 

 

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NHS news review

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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.

A government e-petition has reached the critical 100,000 signiatures for a further debate of the Health and Social Care / Destroy the NHS Bill by MPs. Dr. Kalish Chand explains why he started this e-petition.

The number of signatories increased hugely yesterday – I saw it at 60 thousand in the morning, it’s now beyond 111 thousand. The e-petition simply reads “Calls on the Government to drop its Health and Social Care Bill.” and is still accepting signiatures.

Cameron, Clegg and Lansley will be asked to respond to this huge show of opposition to their plans to destroy the NHS. Cameron is expected to make a strong defence of his brutal attack on the NHS today.

 

NHS bill eligible for new parliament debate after 100,000 sign e-petition

The government’s controversial NHS bill is now eligible for a new debate in parliament after a campaigner’s e-petition gathered support on Tuesday at the rate of more than 1,000 signatures an hour.

With more than 100,000 signing up, GP Kailash Chand’s appeal calling on government “to drop its health and social care bill” has been boosted by support from celebrities such as Stephen Fry, Rio Ferdinand and Jamie Oliver.

The internet round robin has also been backed by digital campaigners – known as clicktivists – at 38 degrees.

Once it crossed the 100,000 threshold, ministers have to consider the issue for debate in the Commons.

“I wanted people to get a simple message. This bill is about privatisation. Do you want to drop it?” said Chand, who described the surge in support as a “Valentine present to someone who loves the NHS”.

The Institute of Healthcare Management – which represents NHS managers also published results of its survey showing 87% of members say the bill is “fundamentally flawed”

The institute joins the Royal College of GPs, the Royal College of Nurses, Chartered Society of Physiotherapists and other bodies in calling for the bill – currently before the Lords – to be scrapped.

 

NHS papers expose risks of health reforms

Health and social care bill could harm patient care and increase costs, internal reports warn

The government’s health reforms run a high risk of reducing levels of safety and patient care while leading to overspending, internal NHS reports have warned.

The potential for conflict between NHS organisations in the new system and upheaval during the transition is high, according to risk assessments drawn up by the four English NHS regions. There is also a high chance the reforms will fail to achieve hoped-for management improvements and budget cuts, they say.

Some of the anticipated problems are rated at the highest risk category, “significant”, and many others are considered “high risk”, even after mitigation measures designed to tackle the issues raised, and despite all actions taken after previous risk reports last autumn.

The warnings – dated January and not due to be updated for three months – will be in place when the controversial health and social care bill becomes law, provided the government succeeds in getting it passed before Easter.

The reports are by the four NHS super-regions in England, created last year by merging 10 regional bodies together into London, the south of England, the Midlands and east, and the north of England. They emerge at a tricky time for ministers as they are likely to reflect the concerns raised by a national risk register, drawn up by civil servants at the Department of Health last year, which the health secretary, Andrew Lansley, is fighting a legal battle to avoid publishing. Pressure on Lansley will be further raised next week when Labour has called an opposition day debate on the issue.

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NHS news review

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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.

 

Shirley Williams calls for competition to be dropped from NHS ‘reforms’.

Nick Clegg states that Lansley is the right man to destroy the NHS.

 

 

Shirley Williams says Lansley should drop NHS competition clauses

Liberal Democrat peer says public fear privatisation of NHS, as David Cameron and Nick Clegg back health secretary

 

The government’s health reforms have been plunged into fresh doubt by a call from the Liberal Democrat peer Shirley Williams for Andrew Lansley to drop competition from the health bill – hours after the prime minister and his Lib Dem deputy defended the health secretary.

Writing in the Guardian, Lady Williams calls for the government to drop the chapter on competition, adding that the public has a fear of privatisation founded on the idea that GPs “might become dependent on advice from powerful private health companies, and that the imposition of UK and European competition laws, addressed to markets and not to social goals, might destroy the public service principles of the NHS“.

“What is needed is willingness by the government, including the prime minister, to reach a compromise on the most contentious issues,” Williams writes.

Her intervention, as leftwing Lib Dems mobilise to “kill the bill”, echoes Labour’s stance. With opposition mounting, the government has conceded more amendments. But Downing Street dismissed a call by the Lib Dem deputy leader, Simon Hughes, for Lansley to quit. The prime minister’s spokesman said: “It’s not an issue for Simon Hughes. The government is fully behind the health bill.”

Hours later, Nick Clegg told the BBC: “Andrew Lansley is the architect of the NHS bill. He cares passionately about the NHS. He’s the right man for the job and he must see it through.”

As plans face fresh attack by Labour peers, Clegg insists Health Secretary is right man to lead shake-up

David Cameron will stage a high-profile hospital visit tomorrow as he attempts to win the public-relations battle over the Government’s controversial health reforms.

The Prime Minister will intervene after the plans to overhaul the structure of the NHS came under fire last week from three unnamed Tory cabinet ministers. Downing Street was forced yesterday to express Mr Cameron’s full confidence in Andrew Lansley as Health Secretary amid fresh criticism of his failure to make the case for the Health and Social Care Bill.

A spokesman insisted Mr Cameron was “fully committed to the reform and modernisation of the health service”.

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.

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