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Andrew Lansley’s NHS reforms are unworkable, says review chief | Society | The Guardian

Prof Steve Field, chairman of the NHS Future Forum – set up last month to undertake the coalition’s “listening exercise” – flatly rejects the health secretary’s plan to compel hospitals to compete for patients and income, which he says could “destroy key services”. The proposal, contained in Andrew Lansley’s health and social care bill, has led key medical organisations to warn that it will lead to the breakup of the NHS and betray the service’s founding principles.

It was ‘Nurse’s Day’ on Friday.

A report from the Torygraph Junk food Britain costs the NHS more than cigarettes and alcohol – Telegraph says that obesity is a huge problem to public health. Lansley consults junk-food companies on NHS policy: McDonald’s and PepsiCo to help write UK health policy | Politics | The Guardian.

There is confirmation by Mark Britnell, an advisor to Cameron that the intention of the Con-Dems’ abolition of the NHS bill is to abolish the NHS and create a health care system based on the US insurance model. He said that the NHS “will be shown no mercy” by the Coalition.

Shameless liar Nick Clegg lies shamelessly by stating that there will be no “privatisation by the back door”. The theme is picked up by the Morning Star.

Shameless liar David Cameron lies shamelessly by claiming “… it’s because I love the NHS so much that I want to change it.”

These shameless liars raise an issue of democracy. Shameless liars deliberately decieving the electorate should be held accountable for their actions. There have been similar recent incidents in UK political history with Blair, Campbell & Co and it appears that Cameron and Clegg are following that example e.g. Clegg’s “I believe” formulation.

Cameron is expected to make a speech full of shameless lies today e.g. “this Government will never, ever take risks with the NHS”.

The BMA warns on training.

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.

Andrew Lansley’s NHS reforms are unworkable, says review chief | Society | The Guardian

The senior doctor called in by David Cameron to review the government’s health reforms has dismissed them as unworkable and “destabilising” in provisional conclusions that could fatally undermine the plans.

Prof Steve Field, chairman of the NHS Future Forum – set up last month to undertake the coalition’s “listening exercise” – flatly rejects the health secretary’s plan to compel hospitals to compete for patients and income, which he says could “destroy key services”. The proposal, contained in Andrew Lansley’s health and social care bill, has led key medical organisations to warn that it will lead to the breakup of the NHS and betray the service’s founding principles.

In an interview with the Guardian, Field says Lansley’s plan to make the NHS regulator Monitor’s primary duty to enforce competition between healthcare providers should be scrapped. Instead it should be obliged to do the opposite, by promoting co-operation and collaboration and the integration of health services.

“If you had a free market, that would destroy essential services in very big hospitals but also might destroy the services that need to be provided in small hospitals,” says Field.

“The risk in going forward [with the bill] as it is, is [of] destabilising the NHS at a local level. It would lead to some hospitals not being able to continue as they are. If you were to say ‘we’re going to go out to competition for vascular surgery services’, University Hospital Birmingham wouldn’t be able to run their own trauma centre, for example, because you wouldn’t have the staff and the skills on site to do things and the volume of procedures needed to ensure clinical standards remain high.”

Nurses “Holding The NHS Together” – Carter, UK

The Royal College of Nursing (RCN) today praised the vital work of nurses as they marked International Nurses’ Day. Dr Peter Carter, RCN Chief Executive & General Secretary, spoke out to highlight the work nurses carry out above and beyond the call of duty, and called for their achievements to be recognised.

Nurses’ Day was also marked by The Prime Minister, David Cameron, and key figures from across the political spectrum, including Deputy Prime Minister Nick Clegg and Leader of the opposition Ed Miliband, as well as Health Secretary Andrew Lansley. The political leaders all recorded video messages pledging their support for nursing and thanking nurses for their work. Many thousands of people have also signed a pledge in support of nurses on the RCN Nurses’ Day website.

Dr Peter Carter, RCN Chief Executive & General Secretary said: “Nurses’ Day is an opportunity for all of us, whether we are patients, nurses or politicians, to reflect on the value of a profession whose worth is clearer than ever as we deal with an aging population who increasingly need care. Medical advances are helping people to live longer, but it is nursing which can help them to live well and make those extra years worth having. I am very pleased that in spite of all that is going on in the NHS at the moment, political leaders and MPs of all persuasions have made time to recognise the value of nursing.”

Junk food Britain costs the NHS more than cigarettes and alcohol – Telegraph

A rising tide of diseases caused by poor diet and couch potato lifestyles are costing the health service around £12bn a year – almost twice the £6.6bn spent on ill health linked to smoking and alcohol, according to research by experts from Oxford University and the World Health Organisation.

The paper, published in the Journal of Public Health, says obesity and poor diet now place “the largest economic burden” on the NHS of all lifestyle choices.

Experts said that while the individual health risks of smoking and excess drinking are high, resulting in billions spent treating liver disease and lung cancer, the far higher numbers of people eating a poor diet had a bigger overall impact on NHS costs.

David Cameorn’s health adviser says the NHS will be ‘shown no mercy’ by the Government – mirror.co.uk

David Cameron’s health adviser has warned the NHS “will be shown no mercy” by the Coalition.

Mark Britnell, who has been advising the PM on reforms, revealed that the NHS could turn into a US-style insurance system.

The former Department of Health bureaucrat said he believed the NHS would leave operations and other procedures to the private sector, with the taxpayer picking up the bill. Unions were outraged at the remarks and they will also anger Lib Dems who have demanded big changes to Health Secretary Andrew Lansley’s reforms.

Last month, the PM ordered a pause in the plans after Lib Dem activists voted against them at their party’s conference. Mr Britnell, head of health at accountants KPMG, visited Downing Street last week to advise on NHS policy. Speaking to bosses of private health firms, Mr Britnell said: “In future, the NHS will be a state insurance provider, not a deliverer.”

NHS reforms will allow private sector to make big profits, says David Cameron’s adviser | Mail Online

NHS reforms will provide private firms the opportunity to make big profits, one of David Cameron’s advisers has said.

Mark Britnell said the healthcare system will be transformed by the Government’s controversial reforms to become a ‘state insurance provider, not a state deliverer’ of care.

His unguarded comments to a conference of executives came as there were calls for Health Minister Andrew Lansley to water down reforms which will give the private sector a far greater role in patient care.

Clegg in vow to listen to medics – Health – The Star

DEPUTY PM Nick Clegg told doctors and nurses in Sheffield unpopular plans to reform the NHS would be “significantly and substantially” altered after a public backlash, writes Ben Spencer.

The Hallam MP, quizzed by staff at Sheffield Children’s Hospital, pledged there would be no “privatisation by the back door”.

The Lib Dem leader hopes to reassert his party’s independence within the Coalition Government after their disastrous performance at last week’s council elections.

He told staff: “No Government has the right to change the NHS without greater consent from people within the NHS.

A chance to move ahead / Comment / Home – Morning Star

Health professionals and patients fear NHS reforms will “destroy essential services,” senior doctor Professor Steve Field warned at the weekend.

Deputy Prime Minister Nick Clegg has vowed to veto the legislation but that’s merely as part of efforts to demonstrate a greater influence by his party following disastrous results at the ballot box last week.

It gives some perspective on his lack of understanding when he commented on a Bill that is designed to allow the backdoor privatisation of the NHS that there would be no “backdoor privatisation” of the NHS.

Health Secretary Andrew Lansley’s plans would scrap primary care trusts and strategic health authorities and give GPs control of £80 billion of NHS spending, with a remit to commission treatment and services from “any willing provider” – including private companies.

It also places a duty on watchdog Monitor to promote competition in the provision of health services and, ostensibly incidentally, removes the duty to provide a free health service from the Health Secretary’s mandate.

The clear impression is that the government is seeking to privatise the NHS. Of that there is no doubt and Prof Field made it quite clear in his comments.

“If you had a free market, that would destroy essential services in very big hospitals and also the services in small hospitals,” he said unequivocally.

David Cameron: ‘It’s because I love the NHS so much that I want to change it’ | News

David Cameron will signal his determination to press ahead with “deep change” in the NHS, warning it faces a fundamental crisis in the future if reforms are blocked.

The Prime Minister will use a keynote speech to detail some of the reworking being done of the Government’s health service shake-up to meet widespread political and professional hostility.

But he will make clear that the controversial package drawn up by Health Secretary Andrew Lansley will not be abandoned as Labour seeks to exploit tensions within the Tory-Lib Dem coalition over the plans.

Speaking at a London hospital today, the premier is expected to say: “We save the NHS by changing it. We risk its long-term future by resisting change now.

“I know that some people still have concerns. They might be listening to this and thinking: ‘OK, but if you love the NHS so much, if you don’t want to take any risks with it, why do you want to change it?

“But this is the point: it’s because I love the NHS so much that I want to change it. It needs to change to make it work better today and it needs to change to avoid a crisis tomorrow.”

Cameron to promise ‘no risks’ in NHS reform – UK Politics, UK – The Independent

David Cameron will today attempt to breathe life back into the Coalition’s faltering plans for the NHS.

In his first major speech on health since the controversial plans were put on hold, he will set out the case for radical reform while insisting that “this Government will never, ever take risks with the NHS”.

BBC News – Cameron set to stand firm on need for NHS changes

David Cameron will try to rally support for planned changes to the NHS in England, in a speech to health staff.

The prime minister is expected to focus on a need for “deep change”, warning of a “crisis” if proposals are blocked.

Medical training reforms threaten patient care | GP online

In a speech to the BMA’s Annual Conference of Junior Doctors, Dr Shree Datta, who co-chairs the BMA’s Junior Doctors Committee, said proposals laid out in Liberating the NHS: developing the healthcare workforce ‘threaten the future provision of high quality patient care as anything in the Health Bill itself’.

‘They propose to invent a new system to commission, deliver, and quality-manage training through large-scale, untested, changes to the current system,’ she said.

Dr Datta expressed concerns over the pace in which medical training reforms would be implemented. ‘I am sure many of you remember MTAS,’ she said. ‘Are we really expected to believe that, with an entirely new structure in place, the recruitment process will run smoothly in a year’s time?’

Reforms could spell the end of deaneries, leaving Health Education England in charge of training funds, Dr Datta warned. Employer-led ‘skills networks’ are beginning to appear but ‘no one knows what they are going to do,’ Dr Datta said.

‘Are employers really going to focus on investing in the long term training of doctors when they are being asked to deliver £20bn in efficiency savings?,’ she added

 

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.

dizzy

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Only a few NHS news items so far today. Lansley has admitted that all London hospitals will have to transform into foundation trusts. This appears to be counter to Tory “no top-down reorganisation” ‘commitments’. Later 13/5/11 edit: Yes, hardly noteworthy compared to the bill to abolish the NHS being a top-down reorganisation, of course.

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.

UNISON Calls On Lansley To Hear The Criticism And Drop The Bill, UK

Health Minister Andrew Lansley must do more than listen – he must hear and act on the barrage of criticism and opposition to the Health and Social Care Bill. This is the message from UNISON, the UK’s largest union, representing more than 450,000 health workers, in its response to the NHS ‘Listening Exercise’.

Christina McAnea, UNISON’s Head of Health, said:

“Andrew Lansley seems incapable of actually hearing the outcry from patients, public, staff, health experts, charities, health economists and even from within the coalition government.

“The public do not want a health service where people can buy their way to the top of the NHS queue, or where healthcare is rationed to make profits for private companies and their shareholders. We know that three quarters of bankruptcies in America are because of the high cost of health bills – no one wants the NHS to be dragged in that direction.

“The Government’s plans are riddled with conflicts of interest and undermine the accountability of the NHS to patients and the public. Patients will soon be priced out of care and see services, wards and hospitals lost without any arrangement to continue treatment.

“We believe the bill is too fatally flawed to be amended and should be dropped completely. ”

BBC News – Andrew Lansley: NHS services in London will change

The government has admitted for the first time that health services on the ground in London will have to change because of NHS reorganisation.

The coalition is turning every hospital in London into a foundation trust, with more control over its own spending.

Health Secretary Andrew Lansley has told BBC London this will inevitably mean changes to the way services are delivered.

A series of hospital mergers is already planned in the city.

Foundation trusts are still within the NHS – but have more freedom to make their own decisions and more freedom over how they spend their money.

Doctors’ chief uncompromising over NHS reform – politics.co.uk

The government’s promise to pause its bill on NHS reforms for a listening exercise is a mere “political device”, a medical boss has said.

Speaking to politics.co.uk, Hamish Meldrum, chairman of the British Medical Association’s (BMA) council, said David Cameron should withdraw the health and social care bill completely rather than amend the legislation.

“At the risk of using a very abused phrase, I agree with Nick [Clegg] that ‘no bill is better than a bad bill’,” he said. His comments underline the difficulties faced by ministers as they seek to identify areas of compromise.

Extensive negotiations with health secretary Andrew Lansley and senior government officials have seen the BMA united with other health organisations in opposing the bulk of the legislation.

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Lansley claims that he is not creating a market despite the private health industry expecting exactly that with healthcare bought privately or through health insurance, staff cuts affecting the standard of service, Lib-Dems demand that Monitor should not only promote competition – note that they are not demanding that it should not promote competition – Baroness Young on difficulties the bill will face in the Lords, UNISON calls for the bill to be dropped due to huge opposition and Dave Gilmour pays for Gary McKinnon’s treatment.

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.

Coalition ‘is weakening effective government’ – UK Politics, UK – The Independent

The British public’s brief flirtation with coalition government is over. A year after the Liberal Democrat-Conservative administration was formed, voters think it has made government weaker, less decisive, less responsive and more confused.

A study by a Whitehall think tank contains very bad news for Nick Clegg. It suggests he has failed in his mission to convince people that coalitions are a good thing. Even current Liberal Democrat supporters are not persuaded.

Mr Clegg’s fightback after last week’s double defeat at the ballot box suffered a setback last night when David Cameron said the Government’s rethink over its NHS reforms was his idea, not Mr Clegg’s. The Prime Minister told the 1922 Committee of Tory MPs that his party must not “allow the Liberal Democrats to pose as a moderating influence” on it. Mr Cameron said the partnership would put his party in a position where it could go for an outright majority at the next general election.

Almost three in five people (58 per cent) believe the Liberal Democrats have abandoned their principles by joining the Coalition. Some 61 per cent of people who voted for Mr Clegg’s party last year now support another one. The only crumb of comfort for Mr Clegg is that the public still think his party was right to join forces with the Tories – by a margin of 52 to 43 per cent.

Pulse – Lansley insists: ‘I have no private sector target’

Health secretary Andrew Lansley has insisted he has no objective to increase private sector involvement in the NHS, as he moved to counter claims that his NHS reforms will pave the way for the privatisation of the health service.

Speaking at the NAPC’s GP-led commissioning conference in London yesterday, a defiant Mr Lansley hit back at the growing army of critics to his health bill by insisting that competition was ‘a means to an end but not an end in itself’.

The beleaguered health secretary has faced a fresh storm of criticism this week from opposition MPs and the profession, with RCGP chair Clare Gerada claiming that implementing it as it stands will cause ‘irreparable damage’ to the core values of the NHS.

In a clear attempt to re-shift the emphasis of the debate away from privatisation, the health secretary argued that competition was a vehicle for improving patient choice, but insisted he had no ideological wish to see more private sector providers.

He said: ‘What is important is for patients to be able to exercise choice. But then they say, “if we have choice, we also have competition, which, if conducted in the wrong way, could fragment those pathways of care that we’re looking for”.’

‘From my point of view, that is never the intention. Competition, [and] the tariff, are means to an end not an end in itself.’

Responding to a question from Nottingham GP Dr Chris Udenze, who asked if Mr Lansley could think of any public health services that haven’t ended up in the hands of multi-national corporations following marketisation, the health secretary insisted he was not creating a market, and had no quota for how much private involvement there should be in the NHS.

Mr Lansley said: ‘I know what a market is, and we are not creating a market. We are creating a public service, where we are using the benefits of competition to deliver that public service.’

Response: Lansley claims that he is not creating a market. Strange then that private health vultures believe that is exactly what he’s doing and anticipate a huge market for privatised health provision and health insurance on the US model.

HealthInvestor: Top health CEOs reveal fears for short-term

The NHS reforms will lead to “short-term pain” but huge long-term opportunities for independent healthcare providers, according to a survey of 20 leading chief executives in the sector.

Consultants The Parthenon Group interviewed 20 CEOs from the UK’s biggest healthcare companies including Nuffield Health, Barchester, Four Seasons, BMI and HCA.

Around 8/10 of respondents remain positive about NHS reform in the long term, with the government’s Any Qualified Provider (AQP) policy still likely to open up much of the NHS market.

Alistair Stranack, partner at The Parthenon Group’s healthcare practice, said he expects around 50% of the NHS’s £120bn funding will be up for grabs via AQP when the reforms are finally passed.

But continued bias against the private sector and worsening bureaucracy means the value of contracts actually awarded to the sector is unlikely to rise above 5-10% over the next five years, he said.

One CEO, responding to the survey, said “the bureaucratic burdeon of AQP is likely to slow down private sector participation and may prove more cumbersome than existing systems of choice like Choose and Book.”

There would be “some hiatus in the short term” but there was “no doubt we will see growth in the longer term as new areas are opened up to AQP,” another company leader commented.

Speaking at a Parthenon event in London, Nick Bosanquet, health economist at Imperial College, predicted that the current crisis in the NHS’s finances would lead to up to 25% of all healthcare in the UK being self-funded or insurance-based by 2018.

Patient care ‘hit by staff cuts’ – National – Lancaster Guardian

Patient care is suffering due to mounting workloads and staff cuts, according to a poll of nurses and midwives.

Two-thirds have thought of leaving the profession and 75% say the number of patients they are treating has increased in the last year.

Overall, 88% said their workload had gone up in the first year of the coalition Government, and 65% think the increase is undermining patient safety and care.

The poll of more than 2,000 nurses and midwives for Unison also found 61% had seen a reduction in staff numbers in their unit.

This could be through redundancy, staff not being replaced when they retire or leave, and less reliance on temporary staff.

More than 78% of those surveyed said their employer was making staff and budget cuts, with 36% reporting redundancies at their workplace.

NHS bosses told ‘hands-off’ over heart surgery – Main Section – Yorkshire Post

Parents, patients and surgeons yesterday gave NHS bosses an unequivocal message not to end children’s heart surgery in Leeds.

There was a determined mood, which at times turned combative, as hundreds of people demonstrated their opposition to plans which could see children’s heart surgery axed in Yorkshire.

Families brought toddlers along to the Royal Armouries in Leeds for a protest and two consultation meetings which attracted about 300 people.

Campaigners fear changes to services could spell the end of heart surgery at Leeds Children’s Hospital.

Leeds Save Our Surgery campaign: It’s ‘not a done deal’ – NHS chiefs – Latest News – Yorkshire Evening Post

NHS chiefs pledged the decision over the future of children’s heart surgery is “not a done deal”.

During a stormy public meeting parents angrily accused experts of talking “waffle” as they quizzed them about why the Leeds unit only features in one of out of four possible future set-ups, while Newcastle is in three.

A total of 500 people attended two consultation meetings yesterday at the Royal Armouries where NHS heads involved in the review of children’s heart surgery were questioned.

NHS reform: Lib Dems demand Monitor climbdown – politics.co.uk

Liberal Democrats fighting the government’s NHS reforms are demanding ministers back down over plans to make the health regulator promote competition.

The controversial health and social care bill places a statutory obligation on Monitor to encourage competition, to the frustration of senior Lib Dems.

politics.co.uk understands Nick Clegg has been presented with the party’s latest demands, as the “pause” over the legislation continues.

At the top of the list is a requirement that Monitor should promote coordination and collaboration among health agencies, as well as competition.

NHS Direct nurses fight plans to make them work more weekends | News | Nursing Times

Nurses working for NHS Direct have lodged a collective grievance after being told they will have to work more weekends in a bid to improve the organisation’s performance.

About 80, mostly band 6, nurses who work for the triage service on a part time basis are affected by the rota changes, Nursing Times understands.

They will require part time staff to work five weekends out of eight, the same number as full time staff. Currently the number of weekends worked by part time staff is worked out on a pro rata basis.

Baroness Young: Health Bill will stall in Lords | GP online

The Bill is part of primary legislation, but the government is expected to define much of the detail of consortia roles in supplementary regulations and guidelines. Regulations form part of secondary legislation and are subject to less parliamentary scrutiny. Guidelines are advisory and do not have legal force.

Many peers were unhappy that much of the detail on consortia would not be in the Health Bill as primary legislation, Baroness Young said.

‘Parliament gets quite antsy if the secondary stuff is not available, at least in draft form, before they have to pass the primary stuff, because you are buying a pig in a poke,’ she said. ‘We have to get work started on clarifying exactly what the role of the NHS Commissioning Board will be in holding consortia accountable.’

UNISON Press | Press Releases Front Page

Health Minister Andrew Lansley must do more than listen – he must hear and act on the barrage of criticism and opposition to the Health and Social Care Bill. This is the message from UNISON, the UK’s largest union, representing more than 450,000 health workers, in its response to the NHS ‘Listening Exercise’.

Christina McAnea, UNISON’s Head of Health, said:

“Andrew Lansley seems incapable of actually hearing the outcry from patients, public, staff, health experts, charities, health economists and even from within the coalition government.

“The public do not want a health service where people can buy their way to the top of the NHS queue, or where healthcare is rationed to make profits for private companies and their shareholders. We know that three quarters of bankruptcies in America are because of the high cost of health bills – no one wants the NHS to be dragged in that direction.

“The Government’s plans are riddled with conflicts of interest and undermine the accountability of the NHS to patients and the public. Patients will soon be priced out of care and see services, wards and hospitals lost without any arrangement to continue treatment.

“We believe the bill is too fatally flawed to be amended and should be dropped completely. “

Pink Floyd star to pay Gary McKinnon’s medical bills – Telegraph

Mr McKinnon has had regular therapy at a London hospital to deal with his depression and suicidal feelings linked to his fight against extradition to the US.

In February, Haringey Primary Care Trust stopped paying the £240 a month cost of Mr McKinnon’s sessions at a hospital in south London.

David Gilmour, Pink Floyd’s lead guitarist, stepped in and agreed to pick up the bills through royalties from record sales.

Janis Sharp, Mr McKinnon’s mother, who was in London yesterday for a march by disability groups against welfare benefit cuts, said: “David Gilmour has been amazing. He stepped in at a time of crisis when we did not know where to turn.”

No one from Haringey Teaching Primary Care Trust was available to comment last night.

 

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.

dizzy

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More NHS news. A group of 42 GPs have supported the Con-Dem government’s NHS ‘reforms’ with a letter to the Telegraph. That’s 42 GPs against the British Medical Association, the Royal College of Nursing, the Royal College of General Practicioners and I’m sure that I’ve missed many… [13/5/11 edit: the Royal College of Midwives, the Liberal-Democrats according to the motion of their spring conference, the Labour Party, UNISON and many concerned, informed poeple and more.]

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 defend Lansley’s NHS reforms – News – OnMedica

A group of GPs has spoken out publicly against detractors of the Coalition’s proposed NHS reforms, saying much of the criticism is “noticeably misinformed”. The chairs of consortia covering nearly 1100 practices across England wrote to The Daily Telegraph asking everybody to lend support to Mr Lansley’s reforms.

The lead signatory of the letter is London GP Dr Jonathan Munday, a former Conservative MP and chair of the Victoria Commissioning Consortium – the Westminster group that Andrew Lansley chose to visit a fortnight ago on the first step of his new ‘listening exercise’.

The group has urged the Coalition not to bow to pressure to dilute the reforms in any amendments that it might make to the proposals, pointing out: “Many GP consortia already have a record of improving patient pathways. That innovation should not be constrained.”

The signatories counter the objection that GPs lack the skills needed to commission care effectively, saying this ignores GPs’ “existing history of commissioning”, through fundholding, GP polysystems and practice-based commissioning.

They point out that it also “misunderstands what will happen in the future”, because appropriately qualified staff rather than GPs themselves will be taking on tasks such as keeping books, writing reports and contracts or compiling statistics. They say GPs’ role will be to “offer strategy, direction, clinical insight and local knowledge to the commissioning of health-care in our areas”.

PMQs: David Cameron and Ed Miliband Lock Horns In The Commons on Coalition’s One-Year Anniversary | Politics | Sky News

Mr Miliband blamed the Prime Minister for what he claimed were the “failing” reforms as he insisted the Tories could not be trusted with the NHS.

But Mr Cameron hit back that the coalition was making “significant and substantial” changes to the service and had ring-fenced its funding.

He said Labour was cutting the NHS in Wales, adding: “There’s only one party you can trust on the NHS and it’s the one I lead.”

The Government has put the NHS reforms on “pause” while they conduct extra consultation after widespread criticism of the changes.

MP attacks health plans – Local – The Star

PLANNED changes to the NHS have been slammed by South Yorkshire MP Dan Jarvis.

The Labour member for Barnsley Central attacked proposals by health secretary Andrew Lansley which would allow GPs to commission care, using private providers as well as NHS hospitals.

Mr Jarvis told the House of Commons of the value of the NHS providing care for his late wife during her battle with cancer. He said: “In my family’s darkest days, we saw the true genius of the NHS. While the market can be useful, there are limits to which it can deliver. There’s a reason that Bupa doesn’t do Accident and Emergency. We must never allow an ideological free market agenda to undermine the NHS.”

Opposition to health bill – Health – lep.co.uk

Campaigners have voiced their concern that a Government shake-up could damage the NHS.

The Royal College of GPs have issued a statement criticising the Government’s Health and Social Care Bill saying it risks “unravelling and dismantling the NHS”.

Now opposers in Lancashire have voiced their own fears.

Lancashire GP, Dr David Wrigley, who works in Carnforth, near Lancaster and is also a member of the British Medical Association Council and Keep Our NHS Public, said “I agree with the concerns of the Royal College of GPs.

“The Bill fundamentally threatens our NHS and the services it provides.

“I am most concerned the Bill is essentially a charter and enabling provision for the privatisation and break-up of our NHS.”

NHS centre may be shut – Health – The Star

A SOUTH Yorkshire rehabilitation centre is being threatened with closure as the NHS trust in charge struggles to find the £100,000 a year needed to keep it running in the face of public sector cuts.

A review is now being undertaken by Rotherham NHS Foundation Trust into Park Rehabilitation Centre on Badsley Moor Lane, Rotherham.

A trust spokeswoman said the facility – which provides rehabilitation and therapies for NHS and paying patients – said the running costs each year were ‘over and above the resources available’.

The centre is owned by NHS Rotherham and leased to the trust to provide services such as physiotherapy, occupational therapy and speech and language therapy. Consultation with patients, staff and health partners over the long-term viability of keeping the centre open.

38 Degrees | Blog | Local 38 Degrees members to meet Nick Clegg about NHS in 48 hours

Across the country 38 Degrees members are meeting their local MPs to hand in our Save Our NHS petition. One of those members is Geraldine O’Connor from Sheffield and in 48 hours she is meeting her local MP, Nick Clegg.

Here is her message. Please spread the word and help get as many signatures as possible before Friday.

Dear friend,

My name is Geraldine and, like you, I’m part of 38 Degrees. I live in Sheffield. This Friday, I am going to deliver a copy of the Save Our NHS petition to my local MP – Nick Clegg.

In the next few weeks, Nick Clegg has to decide whether or not to dig his heels in to block dangerous changes to the NHS. This is our chance to put pressure directly on him.

I want to show him that there are hundreds of thousands of people standing behind me urging him to stand up for the NHS. Can you help by adding your name to the petition now?

You can add your name here:
http://www.38degrees.org.uk/save-our-nhs

Join UK Uncut’s Emergency Operation to defend the NHS | Joe Hill | Comment is free | guardian.co.uk

On 28 May UK Uncut will be staging an “Emergency Operation“, transforming high-street bank branches across the country into hospitals, operating theatres and GPs’ surgeries. This day of action is an urgent response to the cuts and privatisation that threaten to wreak our National Health Service. While the health service is being cut, broken up and sold off, the banks that caused the financial crisis have been left virtually untouched. As Andrew Haldene of the Bank of England recently pointed out, our yearly implicit subsidy to the banks is equal to the entire NHS budget. On 28 May we will demand that the government transforms the broken banking system, and not our NHS.

This will be UK Uncut’s first national day of action since 26 March. On that day, half a million people marched through the streets of London against the government’s cuts. UK Uncut staged a sit-in at Fortnum and Masons. Despite being described by the senior police officer present as “nonviolent and sensible“, all 145 protesters were arrested. For them this was, and continues to be, an unpleasant experience. We are no strangers to sit-ins, but it was not fun to sit in a cell for 24 hours, without access to a solicitor, or to have possessions and clothes confiscated indefinitely. These events appear to be part of a worrying pattern of political policing, where protesters are criminalised in order to intimidate.

But we will not be intimidated away from defending our public services, and we will not stop highlighting the injustice of the government’s cuts. We will keep doing what we do best: creative, fun, family-friendly protests. And if there was ever something we all need to stand up for, it’s the NHS. As its founder Nye Bevan said, the NHS will last “as long as there are folk left with the faith to fight for it”.

As private healthcare companies circle like vultures, the government is plotting to cut the NHS and sell off what’s left. Despite a pre-election promise by David Cameron to “cut the deficit, not the NHS”, 50,000 NHS jobs will be lost over the next five years including thousands of doctors, nurses and midwives in a £20bn “efficiency drive”. The Royal College of General Practitioners has warned that the government’s NHS plans jeopardise the principle of universal healthcare, saying that “we are moving headlong into an insurance-type model“. If there is any confusion about what an insurance-type model looks like, simply look across the pond to the United States

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There are very few NHS news articles so far today after yesterday’s glut. News is concentrating on the year’s anniversary of the Con-Dem coalition. There are articles suggesting that Nick Clegg is going to be more forceful in defending the NHS following the Liberal-Democrats abysmal election results last week.

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.

Andrew Lansley may be undone by George Osborne | Paul Goodman | Comment is free | guardian.co.uk

There is no better story in political journalism than a row between the two coalition partners. Flare-ups and fallings-out make delightful copy: they offer the distant, delicious prospect of name-calling, resignations, even the possible collapse of the government and a general election. Andrew Lansley’s health bill – and the pause in proceeding with it – is being seen through this prism. But it isn’t the only way of viewing events, let alone the best one.

After all, the Liberal Democrats originally backed the bill. The coalition agreement referred specifically to GPs commissioning care for patients – the bedrock of the health secretary’s plans. These are enshrined in the bill, and not one Lib Dem MP voted against the bill at its second reading. Paul Burstow, a fully fledged health minister, played his part in backing the bill. Nick Clegg himself signed the white paper that presaged it.

In opposition, he said: “I think breaking up the NHS is exactly what you need to do to make it a more responsive service”, and indicated that replacing it with a social insurance system shouldn’t be ruled out. The Orange Book – which contained essays from senior figures often seen as being on the party’s left, such Vince Cable and Steve Webb – said that “the NHS is failing to deliver a health service that meets the needs and expectations of today’s population”.

UK Uncut targets banks in ’emergency operation’ against NHS shakeup | Society | The Guardian

Anti-cuts campaigners who have closed scores of high street stores with a string of direct action demonstrations are launching a new campaign against the government’s proposed shakeup of the NHS.

Hundreds of activists dressed as doctors and nurses are planning to occupy banks around the country on 28 May, transforming them into mocked-up hospitals, GPs’ surgeries and operating theatres.

The campaign – described as the “emergency operation” – is being organised by UK Uncut and aims to highlight the banks’ role in the financial crisis and the impact of the government’s NHS plans on patient care.

“The banks are back paying lavish bonuses and raking in billions in profit, yet the government tells us there is no alternative to unprecedented public sector cuts,” a UK Uncut supporter, who gave his name as Jack Davies, said.

The day of action, which activists hope will close down scores of high street banks across the UK, is the first major protest UK Uncut has called since 145 of its supporters were arrested for occupying the Fortnum & Mason food store during the TUC’s anti-cuts rally in March.

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