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Waiting times for diagnostic tests are hugely increased under the ConDem government despite Cameron’s pledges yesterday, British Mediacal Association’s GPs conference object to the Con-Dem’s plans to destroy the NHS and many GPs are driven to early retirement by theCon-Dems.

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.

NHS waiting times for diagnostic tests increase despite Cameron’s pledge | Society | The Guardian

The number of patients waiting more than six weeks for diagnostic tests on the NHS has tripled within 12 months, according to figures released a day after David Cameron pledged not to lose control of NHS waiting times.

More than 14,000 patients who had diagnostic procedures including MRI scans and cardiac tests in April 2011 had waited more than six weeks, up from 4,129 in the same month a year ago – an increase of 240% in a year.

The number of patients with waits of more than three months also rocketed, with 1,409 people in this category against just 193 the previous April.

On Tuesday Cameron stressed that the abolition of central monitoring of NHS treatment and A&E waiting times would not lead to a loss of focus in these areas.

GPs not fooled by David Cameron’s pledges – doctors vote overwhelmingly to prevent destruction of NHS

GPs have voted overwhelmingly to continue to oppose the Health and Social Care bill.

The GPs, including members of the Medical Practitioners Union (part of Unite) were among 250 GPs present at the British Medical Association’s annual GP conference in London today (Thursday).

The vote reflects that doctors are also not convinced that the prime minister’s pledges will safeguard the service.

Ron Singer of the Medical Practitioners Union said: “GPs were not fooled by the warm words of the prime minister. Today GPs have signalled to the government that their health bill is not acceptable in any aspect. The general consensus is that this bill must go.

“It poses the greatest threat to the NHS since its inception. Far from improving the nation’s health, such is the scale of the change the government is seeking to impose, they will compromise the health of the nation and endanger patients.

“Whatever the prime minister may promise, the medical experts are telling him this bill will fragment the NHS. Our parliamentarians must now listen.”

Reforms ‘cutting legs off NHS’, says Laurence Buckman | Healthcare Network | Guardian Professional

The health and social care bill is not even law yet and the current structures of the NHS are “already collapsing all over the place”, Dr Laurence Buckman, chairman of the British Medical Association’s (BMA) GPs committee, has said.

In a speech to the annual GPs’ conference of local medical committees on 9 June, he told delegates that the NHS “isn’t just being cut to the bone, the whole limbs are being amputated” as a result of health secretary Andrew Lansley’s plans to reorganise the health service.

“If you cut the legs off the NHS, what happens? It falls over,” he said. He went on to state that the BMA “does not support the unfettered extension of private involvement in the NHS”.

Health News – NHS reforms ‘a major factor in GP retirement’

The majority of GPs who plan to retire in the next two years say the NHS reforms have played a major role in their decision to leave.

That is the preliminary finding of a major new survey by the British Medical Association (BMA), which has analysed the first 10,000 responses to its poll ahead of an annual GP conference.

Age was the most common reason given for imminent retirement, with 71 per cent of GPs citing this.

However, NHS reform came a close second, with 56 per cent of respondents claiming that this had played a significant part in their decision-making.

The findings suggest that as many as 3,700 GPs across the UK could soon retire as a result of NHS reforms.

Dr Laurence Buckman, chairman of the BMA’s GPs committee, said: ‘These results show that GPs have significant concerns about the government’s NHS reform plans as they stand.

‘From talking to GPs we know that they see potential in the principle of clinically-led commissioning, but there need to be major changes made to the bill if the government is to reassure GPs.’

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NHS news is dominated by responses to Prime Minister David Cameron’s ‘Five pledges, hold me to them’ speech yesterday. Many responses attack the credibility of Cameron’s pledges.

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.

If the NHS budget is being protected, why are hospitals facing huge cuts? | Society | The Guardian

Special report: The government promised real terms increases in the NHS budget, but Sarah Boseley finds on the ground the reality is services are being cut and healthcare rationed

In the little village of Mortimer, near Reading, Berkshire, Bill Walters sits most of the day in the conservatory he built before his hip gave out. He can get up the stairs with crutches, but the pain, he says, half-way up and breathing heavily with the effort, is “excruciating”. Doctors agree he needs a hip replacement. On 9 December he was told the waiting time was 18 weeks. He now has a “pencilled-in” date in July, when he will have been waiting for 31 weeks.

A little over a year ago, David Cameron stood at a lectern in the first televised leaders debate of a British general election and declared his passionate devotion to the NHS following the illness and death of his son, Ivan. “What it did for my family and my son I will never forget,” he said. His party would make an exception of the NHS, he promised, sparing the axe and increasing spending in real terms so that “we improve it, we expand it, we develop it”.

Bill Walters could be forgiven for wondering how Cameron’s pledge squares with his present pain. Waiting lists like the one he is on are growing. The Patients Association, hearing hundreds of stories from people complaining of delayed and cancelled operations, put in freedom of information requests to every acute NHS Trust in England in January, asking about nine common surgical procedures including hip and knee replacements. Among the 62 Trusts that replied, it concluded, 10,757 patients had not received an operation because they were unfortunate enough to need it in 2010 instead of 2009.

New Statesman – Cameron’s NHS spending pledge is worthless

The PM claims that spending will rise but the figures show that it will be frozen or even cut.

One of David Cameron’s “five guarantees” on the NHS is that spending on the health service will rise “in real terms” over the course of this Parliament. In his speech on the NHS today, the PM boasted that there would be “£11.5 billion more in cash for the NHS in 2015 than in 2010”. He added: “We are not cutting the NHS. In fact, we are spending more on it.”

Cameron is referring to the fact that spending on the NHS, which currently stands at £102.9 bn, will rise to £114.4bn by 2014-15, a cash increase of £11.5bn. But what he ignores is that all of this increase will be swallowed up by inflation. The purchasing power of the NHS will be progressively reduced as the price of drugs and equipment continues to rise.

Once we take inflation into account, health spending will be frozen or even cut. As Professor John Appleby, chief economist at the King’s Fund, writes in the latest edition of the British Medical Journal, “by 2014-15 the amount of money the NHS has to spend in real terms, its purchasing power, will have gone down by 0.9%.” Thus, not only will Cameron fail to meet his flagship pledge to increase spending on the NHS “in real terms”, he will fail to even protect it from the cuts.

More insidious but still deadly / Comment / Home – Morning Star

David Cameron’s decision to give personal guarantees about the future of the NHS and to declare himself “personally accountable” to deliver those guarantees is astounding.

It shows that the Prime Minister understands that Health Secretary Andrew Lansley has lost the plot and with it any appreciable support in the health service.

No-one should have any illusion about Cameron’s attitude to the NHS and other public services.

He knew exactly what was in Lansley’s proposals.

He and Deputy Prime Minister Nick Clegg signed them last year.

Both men have been ducking and diving in recent months as one section of health carers after another has lined up to denounce what they see clearly as the private sector taking over our health service.

Cameron makes a lot of noise about not privatising the NHS, but he is being disingenuous.

No-one imagines that such a huge enterprise as the NHS would be put up as a job lot to be bid for by privateers or revamped as “some American-style private system,” as he puts it.

The Con-Dem coalition plan is more insidious but just as deadly.

The government intends to open every aspect of health care to the private sector, allowing it to play the role of a parasitic creeper that envelops a healthy tree and deprives it of life.

Cameron’s 5 NHS lies / Britain / Home – Morning Star


The lies

‘We will not endanger universal coverage — we will make sure it remains a National Health Service.’
‘We will not break up or hinder efficient and integrated care — we will improve it.’
‘We will not lose control of waiting times — we will
ensure they are kept low.’
‘We will not cut spending on the NHS — we will increase it.’
‘And if you’re worried that we are going to sell-off the NHS and create some American-style private system — we will not. We will ensure ­competition benefits
patients.’

Lister replies

£20 billion ‘efficiency savings’ will leave patients a grim choice of going private or going without
The Bill threatens to fragment many other services by offering bits of them up to competitive tender by ‘any willing provider’ and putting hospitals into competition.
But waiting times are already rising after Mr Lansley scrapped national targets.
This is wilful deception. From this year a combination of inflation and other cost pressures on the NHS mean that real spending is already going down in real terms, and will at best remain frozen over two years.
Not even the most fanatical private provider wants to buy up the whole NHS, or could afford to do so. Cameron knows that even if he did want a US-style system here, he could never sell it to the voters.

Critics unconvinced by Cameron pledges on the NHS | Ekklesia

Prime Minister David Cameron’s promise to “protect” the National Health Service will be meaningless if his government remains determined to force through the most significant and controversial rewriting of the NHS’ mission in its 60 year history, say health workers.

Unite, now the country’s largest trade union, says that widespread distrust of the government’s plans to dismantle the NHS have forced the prime minister into the astonishing position of making yet another declaration of commitment to the NHS – in the face of doubts brought about by his own policies, and by lack of confidence in Health Secretary Andrew Lansley.

Unite says Mr Cameron’s emollient words on 7 June 2011 will be met with “justified voter anger” if, as feared, the pause on the Health and Social Care bill results in little or no change to the competition-first proposals which have attracted an astonishing degree of criticism from health professionals.

The union adds that promises to keep waiting lists “low” insult the thousands of people now facing an 18-week or more wait since the government scrapped waiting time commitments as one of its first acts in office.

Cuts bite despite PM’s NHS vow (From The Northern Echo)

ON the day Prime Minister David Cameron pledged to increase spending on the NHS, a North-East hospital trust announced an emergency package of spending cuts totalling £22m.

Simon Pleydell, chief executive of South Tees Hospitals NHS Foundations Trust, also revealed yesterday that, despite Government promises to ring-fence NHS spending, his trust had started this financial year £6m worse off than the previous year.

Mr Pleydell, who runs the 1,160-bed James Cook University Hospital, in Middlesbrough, and the 180-bed Friarage Hospital in Northallerton, North Yorkshire, said the trust was having to slam the brakes on spending in order to hit Government efficiency targets.

Yesterday, Mr Cameron announced he was making “real changes” to controversial plans for NHS reforms in England and issued five guarantees, including a promise that NHS spending would be increased every year.

BBC News – Social care industry on the ‘brink of collapse’

The UK’s care industry is on the “brink of collapse”, according to a report by the public-sector union Unison.

There have been growing concerns about the UK’s biggest care-home provider, Southern Cross.

Unison said other companies in the sector also had financial difficulties, and that if they went under, taxpayers would have to pick up the bill.

The Department of Health denied that financial issues had undermined the care system.

Southern Cross, which has 31,000 residents, has said it will have to reduce the amount of rent it pays to its landlords for the next four months.

The Unison report said the next biggest provider, Four Seasons, was also in trouble and the two providers were “clinging on by their fingernails”.

But Four Seasons chief executive Dr Pete Calveley said the company was in “a robust financial position and is certainly not in any difficulties”.

Continue reading the main story

“Start Quote

The care crisis is far from over”

Dave PrentisUnison

The union said the care industry could be highly profitable for private-equity investors and was worth about £4bn a year – but the investment was “high risk”, with many owners trying to “re-sell at the highest price in the shortest time”.

“Just as some banks were too big to fail so some public service contracts are too big, or too important, to fail,” it added.

Unison general secretary Dave Prentis said: “We have already seen the huge impact of the Southern Cross collapse, but the care crisis is far from over.

“Private equity and other private sector operators are hovering over the NHS, eager to make a quick profit – at the long term cost of care quality and continuity of service.

“Taxpayers will have to pay the price again, as they will be forced to pick up the bill for collapsing companies. We need to halt the privatisation of any more public services, before more people are made to suffer in the name of profits.”

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David Cameron is to make a speech on the NHS today. The speech has been widely reported before the event and we know that he raise the fake-accountability of the ballot box and make five pledges attempting to persuade that the NHS is safe.

The fake-accountability of the ballot box echoes Nick Clegg’s recent speech of 26 May. We know that the accountability of the ballot box is fake from our recent history. Although we finally got rid of Tony Blair, we are unable to undo many of his actions like the untold suffering and death in the Middle-East. He lied and lied and lied to pursue a perverted agenda against the wishes of the majority of the British people. So far he has not been held to account for his lies and deceptions. Cameron’s recent speech in Brussels [edit: Munich] illustrate that the Con-Dem coalition government is fully signed-up to that very same Neo-Con bullshit.

Image of David 'Pinoccio' Cameron and Nick Clegg. Image is originally from the UK's Mirror newspaper. Looks like Bliar doesn't he? Cameron seems to be apingning/copying Bliar's public image ~ speeches aligning himslf with Bliar ... and of course ... who Bliar aligned with ... Cameron’s pledges look fairly worthless since many have already been proved to be untrue.

  • The NHS will remain a universal service

This probably means available to all. The NHS may still be available to all but with a greatly reduced range of services.

  • Changes will improve “efficient and integrated care” not hinder it

This appears to be a matter of opinion and not open to assessment.

  • Hospital waiting times will be “kept low”

This is total nonsense. Andrew Lansley abandoned the waiting time limit and waiting times are already longer.

  • NHS spending will be increased, not reduced

This is a repeated claim by the Con-Dem coalition. Cuts are already being made. Services are already being restricted. Waiting lists are already increasing.

  • The NHS will not be sold off and competition will benefit patients

This is the same ‘Straw man’ argument that Nick Clegg proposed recently. It’s not about the NHS being sold off. It’s about providing a restricted health service where you will have to pay – or go without – services that are not provided. It’s also the first stage in the process of privatisation and transition to a private insurance-based health service on the US model.

The second part of this statement “competition will benefit patients” is simply a matter of ideology. Cameron continues to adhere to the discredited Capitalist “the market will provide” ideology. How will competition – actually hugely increased involvement of private interests – benefit patients?

NHS waiting-time targets scrapped by Andrew Lansley | Politics | The Guardian

A&E waiting times increase sharply | Society | guardian.co.uk

New Statesman – The coalition’s NHS headache gets bigger

Longer NHS waits ‘are down to snow’ claims Andrew Lansley | Metro.co.uk

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.

Back me or sack me over NHS reforms, Cameron tells voters – UK Politics, UK – The Independent

David Cameron will today invite the public to vote against him at the next general election if he fails to keep his promises to protect the National Health Service.

The Prime Minister will put his reputation on the line as he tries to allay fears that the Government’s reforms could lead to the back-door privatisation of the NHS.

In a “trust me” speech in London, he will argue that no change is not an option and would threaten “the precious principle of free healthcare for all who need it, when they need it”. He will say: “We have to change the NHS to avoid a crisis tomorrow too. This is what will happen if we don’t. More overstretch, more over-crowding, the NHS buckling under the pressure of an ageing population and the rising cost of treatments.”

BBC News – Don’t mention the reforms

Few voters ever understood the government’s planned NHS reforms.

Few understand how it’s run now.

So, very few will understand the reform to the reforms which the ministers plan to unveil soon.

(If you think I’m wrong, turn to the person next to you and ask them to explain the difference between PCTs and GP-led commissioning. Better still ask them what a PCT is.)

Thus today David Cameron’s speech on the NHS looks set to say almost nothing about any of that. Instead, it will focus on what voters do know and care about.

You don’t need market research to tell you – although Team Cameron has done a great deal of it – that people want the NHS to remain a national, integrated service with it’s funding increasing, waiting lists kept low and no privatisation.

Miliband: Cameron is protecting the NHS against himself – politics.co.uk

Ed Miliband will say the NHS has descended into chaos today as he tries to make political capital out of the government’s healthcare reforms.

The Labour leader will seize on David Cameron’s five ‘guarantees’ for the NHS to mock the prime minister, suggesting he is creating a safety net against his own policy.

BBC News – Cornwall Council tells of ‘widespread concern’ over NHS

Cornwall Council has warned the government of “widespread concern” about controversial reforms proposed for the NHS.

The authority’s leader, Alec Robertson, has written an open letter to Health Secretary Andrew Lansley.

Mr Robertson said the Conservative-led council was concerned a drive towards competition could be “deeply damaging”.

It comes as the prime minister prepares to make a key speech about the plans.

In the letter, Mr Robertson said: “The view that unites councillors is that our NHS is treasured, it is seen as the envy of the world, and we want to make sure that this remains so.”

 

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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DRAFT to be expanded and developed

David Cameron is to make a speech on the NHS today. The speech has been widely reported before the event and we know that he raise the fake-accountability of the ballot box and make five pledges attemting to persuade that the NHS is safe.

The fake-accountability of the ballot box echoes Nick Clegg’s recent speech of 26 May. We know that the accountability of the ballot box is fake from our recent history. Although we finally got rid of Tony Blair, we are unable to undo many of his actions like the untold suffering and death in the Middle-East. He lied and lied and lied to pursue a perverted agenda against the wishes of the majority of the British people. So far he has not been held to account for his lies and deceptions. Cameron’s recent speech in Brussels illustrate that the Con-Dem coalition government is fully signed-up to that very same Neo-Con bullshit.

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.

Continue ReadingNHS news review DRAFT

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Public Finance Initiative (PFI) hospitals are raising problems for health ‘reformers’ in a two ways. Firstly, they are a huge financial burden on the NHS so that medical services are cut to pay for them. Secondly, Lansley’s reforms require that hospitals transform to NHS trust status. Since trusts are required to have a stable financial status, something must be done about the PFI hospitals which are not financially stable.

Lord Owen calls on Liberal-Democrats to reject the Abolish the NHS Bill.

Prime Minister David Cameron to make a speech on privatisation of the NHS defending – despite all the opposition – and claiming – despite all the evidence – that the NHS is not to be privatised.

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.

Government will review NHS PFI schemes | Healthcare Network | Guardian Professional

A health minister has confirmed that the government is examining some private finance initiative (PFI) schemes involving NHS trusts, although he denied that there have been talks about injections of extra funding.

“We are committed to creating stronger hospitals through foundation trusts,” said health minister Simon Burns. “As part of this work we are examining some PFI schemes, but it is too early to know what the solutions might be, or what, if any support might be needed from the department. There have been no discussions between the Treasury and the Department for Health on specific proposals to provide extra funding for PFI hospitals.”

The Telegraph today reported that the government might have to bail out PFI hospitals. To become a foundation trust hospital, an NHS trust needs to meet strict requirements on the quality of clinical care they provide and on the state of their finances. The Financial Times along with the Telegraph reported that the review will be carried out by consultancy firm McKinsey.

PFI deals have been heavily criticised for leaving trusts with huge repayment bills. Last August the Department of Health said that the NHS faces a £65bn PFI repayment bill, six times the original total value of the buildings covered. The nature of the scheme means that private companies fund the initial building of hospitals and other health service units, often also providing maintenance services, with NHS trusts paying for the facilities over a number of years or decades.

New Statesman – The NHS hospitals that will have to cut services to survive

17 NHS trusts, more than half of which are saddled with extortionate PFI debts, face deep cuts to the frontline.

This lays bear the financial crisis facing the health service. The financial unsustainability of these trusts could see some local communities losing their maternity services or accident and emergency departments.

The FT notes that in the past six years, these 17 trusts (a graphic of the affected hospitals ishere) have needed to be bailed out with £625m in as yet unreturned loans and other forms of cash support. This is the equivalent of the annual running costs of two entire hospitals.

Perhaps the most controversial fact in this report is the fact that more than half of these hospitals have buildings funded through private finance initiatives (PFI). Because these buildings are thought to be too expensive to close, neighbouring institutions — which may not have financial problems — could be closed to save them.

Lib Dems urged to reject ‘flawed Bill’ / Britain / Home – Morning Star

Liberal Democrat MPs were urged at the weekend by SDP founder Lord Owen to vote down the government’s unpopular NHS proposals – even if they are substantially changed.

Health Secretary Andrew Lansley has indicated that he is ready to accept “substantial and significant” changes to the legislation, which would hand over commissioning powers to GPs and extend private-sector provision of NHS services.

But Lord Owen said that the NHS was being “pushed to conceptual destruction” and that it was “almost impossible” to sufficiently rewrite such a flawed Bill.

He stressed that the government’s “listening exercise” had shown that professionals and users believed only minor legislative changes were required.

“To drop this massive legislative spanner into the works would be a profound error,” he said.

“A sufficient number of Liberal Democrat MPs can surely be found to vote this Bill down … with the official Labour opposition, some Northern Ireland MPs and Scottish and Welsh Nationalists, where such legislation would not have a hope of getting through their legislatures.”

David Cameron puts reputation on the line with five pledges on the future of the NHS – Telegraph

The Prime Minister will promise to keep waiting lists low, maintain spending, not to privatise the NHS, to keep care integrated and to remain committed to the “national” part of the health service.

Such is the concern in Downing Street at the damage the issue of NHS reform is causing the Government, that Mr Cameron will put his reputation on the line with a personal pledge to protect its core values. It represents his boldest attempt yet to assuage criticism from his Liberal Democrat Coalition partners and from many health professionals over the impact of the reforms.

In his speech, the Prime Minister will admit that he is willing to act on their concerns after listening to the “profession and patients” during a two-month exercise which was held after Mr Cameron called for a “pause” in the Health Bill’s passage.

His “five guarantees” are designed to show the Prime Minister is committed to the NHS, and “he is hearing what is being said”, according to one source. Mr Cameron’s promise on integrated care is designed to ensure patients receive continuity of treatment, without having to explain their condition from scratch each time to different doctors.

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