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NHS news is dominated by a speech given by David Cameron yesteday. He claims that the NHS must change but that does not justify the privatisation and withdrawal of services that he proposes.

He mentions a crisis of funding. 38 Degrees and UK Uncut are clearly showing how to resolve that issue – by combating tax avoidance by rich tax avoiding Capitalists.

17.05.11: Steve Bell on David Cameron's NHS reforms speech
17.05.11: Steve Bell on David Cameron's NHS reforms speech

He engages in “It’s because I love the NHS so much that I want to change it.” emotionality which attracts many comments. I wonder if Craig Oliver was drunk when he came up with that one.

Cameron repeatedly claims that the NHS is safe in his hands BUT the Health and Social Care Bill does away with the government providing a comprehensive health service

and

it has received near total opposition from healthcare professionals. Cameron claims to be willing to listen to doctors and nurses BUT they are calling for the bill to be abandoned.

Many groups and individuals respond to Cameron’s speech.

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.

My love for the NHS is why I want change… » Hospital Dr

(Text of Cameron’s speech)

PM has still not made case for NHS reforms | News

David Cameron’s speech today on NHS reform has one familiar element: the extent of his personal attachment to the health service.

“It is because I love the NHS so much that I want to change it,” he says. That is an argument familiar from the election campaign, when Mr Cameron emphasised that the NHS was safe in his hands precisely because he had personal experience of its excellence during the tragic illness of his late son, Ivan. Indeed, it underlay the Tories’ commitment not only to exempt health from spending cuts, but to increase its funding.

Few doubt the NHS needs reform and that spending at present levels is unsustainable given the demands of an ageing population and the expansion in expensive new treatments. But accepting the need for reform is not the same thing as welcoming the Government’s health bill. This is a complicated set of proposals in one piece of legislation, which gives GPs more control over spending and commissioning services and at the same time seeks to take out layers of bureaucracy and increase competition. Many people, including health professionals, who would happily give GPs a greater say in the service, baulk at the extension of commercial competition. And Mr Cameron’s decision to “pause” the reforms – but not, as he says today, to stop them – is a measure of the public disquiet about the Bill and its implications.

UNISON Press | Press Releases Front Page

Commenting on David Cameron’s speech on the Health and Social Care Bill, at Ealing Hospital, in London, today (16 May), Christina McAnea, Head of Health at UNISON, which represents more than 450,000 health workers, said:

“David Cameron is taking the ‘national’ out of the health service and turning it into a fragmented, money-spinning operation.

“The Prime Minister is using extreme examples to paint an untrue picture. He admits the NHS is providing the best service it has ever done, with reports saying it is the most efficient and equitable health system.

“Cameron’s call to crack down on waste in the NHS is a smokescreen for a move to a wholesale market, which opens the NHS up to privatisation. The real waste is the time spent on the fatally flawed reforms, which will force NHS patients to the back of a very long queue.

“He talks about having more choice and protecting budgets, but health workers are seeing their jobs axed and wards, services and even entire hospitals lost without any arrangements to protect continuity of patient care.

Unite questions how Cameron’s ‘substantive’ changes to NHS bill are going to happen

David Cameron’s pledge to ensure ‘substantive’ changes to the NHS ‘reform’ bill should be probed to discover what he actually means, Unite, the largest union in the country, said today (Monday 16 May).

Unite said that the deeply flawed Health and Social Care bill should be scrapped and a rtoyal commission set-up to investigate the future of the NHS.

Unite pointed out the discrepancy between the prime minister’s ‘vision’ and the fact that tens of thousands of NHS jobs had been or were going to be lost in the near future. Wards are already closing, waiting lists growing and services being axed or reduced.

Unite national officer for health, Rachael Maskell, said: ”David Cameron in his speech today was long on rhetoric, but short of specifics. This was a PR exercise in verbal gymnastics due to the political pressures he is under, especially from his Liberal Democrat allies.

”David Cameron wants it both ways with the Health and Social Care bill. He said today there will be no privatisation, no ‘cherry picking’ of services by private companies and no up-front costs for care, but we question how the prime minister’s ‘substantive’ changes are going to be incorporated into the legislation.

”The bill is so flawed that it should be scrapped. The whole bill is designed on the premise of Monitor’s role as an economic regulator and the concept of ‘any willing provider’ i.e. private companies. If the prime minister is serious about these changes, it will mean a new bill.

Macmillan Responds To The Prime Minister’s Speech On NHS Reform, UK

Responding to David Cameron’s speech on NHS reform today, Mike Hobday, Head of Policy of Macmillan Cancer Support, said:

“We welcome the Prime Minister’s reassurance that the relevant healthcare professionals will be involved in key decision-making about the commissioning of NHS care and the commitment that patients will receive high-quality and coordinated care, rather than the NHS being subject to an unbridled free market. This is a key safeguard to ensure that care for cancer patients does not suffer under the proposed NHS reforms.

“Cancer is a set of highly complex diseases and GPs tell us that they will need specialist help to commission cancer services. This is why it is vital that cancer networks should continue to be used to inform decision making about the commissioning of cancer services, and why the Government must commit to fund them at least until GP consortia are up and running in 2014.

“We hope the ‘listening exercise’ results in a long-term commitment to clinical networks, and are encouraged by the David Cameron’s comments today that this will be the case.”

BMA Comment On Prime Minister’s Speech On NHS, UK

Commenting on the Prime Minister’s speech on NHS reform in England today (Monday 16 May, 2011), Dr Hamish Meldrum, Chairman of Council at the BMA, said:

“We agree with the Prime Minister that the NHS needs to change. There needs to be greater integration, greater efficiency, and more emphasis on prevention. However, the Health Bill as it is currently written would make these improvements far harder to achieve, leading to a more fragmented health service, with many hospitals at risk of closure. Whilst we welcome his commitment to listening to staff and to taking them with him, most doctors will not feel able to support this Bill unless it is radically amended.”

The Prime Minister also highlighted the fact that alcohol misuse and obesity place significant burdens on the NHS. Dr Meldrum added:

“Unfortunately the government has often ignored the advice of health organisations on how to tackle alcohol misuse and obesity, preferring to listen to and rely on the views of industries which have a vested interest in selling unhealthy products“.

Labour – Cameron’s Reforms Will Leave NHS Fragmented, Taking it Backwards – UK Politics – News on News

John Healey MP, Labour’s Shadow Health Secretary, has hit out at David Cameron’s plans for NHS reform, saying they will leave the service fragmented and take it backwards.

Labour has also released a document on the lack of coherence in the Tory-led Government’s plans and showing the level of concern and opposition to them throughout the NHS.

John Healey said:

“This is the Prime Minister’s third launch of his NHS plans. He’s made his ‘I love the NHS’ speech before but today he said nothing to clear up the confusion and chaos around his ideological, top-down reorganisation. He made the case for change in the NHS, but not for his change.

“David Cameron’s plans will fragment the NHS, with a free market free for all undermining the quality, integration and public accountability of NHS services. As even the Tory-led Health Select Committee has said, the legislation as it stands will make better services and better value for money harder not easier to achieve. It will take the NHS backwards.

“David Cameron talks of his love for the NHS, but he has broken his promise to protect the NHS. If he really wants an NHS with no privatisation, no new charges for patient services and no competition for its own sake, he must make fundamental changes to his NHS plans because his Health Bill allows exactly this.”

Ignore his denials: Cameron, like Blair, wants to turn ‘NHS’ into a kitemark | George Monbiot | Comment is free | The Guardian

The difference between David Cameron and Tony Blair is that Blair was better at disguising his intentions. He would never have announced, for example, the sale of public forests. Instead he might have promised “a world-class forest estate” in which “walker-led beacon-foundation woodlands” would be managed through “partnerships with a plurality of recreational providers”. Ten years later we would discover that our forests had mysteriously fallen into the hands of timber companies, and were being felled in the name of customer choice.

Nor would he have done anything as stupid as this government’s attempt to transform the NHS in one bill. Cameron sought to dig himself out of his hole on Monday, but too late. His claim that “there will be no privatisation … no cherry-picking from private providers” reminds us that privatisation and cherry-picking are the likely outcomes of his bill. Blair would have allowed private interests to keep spreading through the health service as slowly and quietly as dry rot. In their book The Plot Against the NHS, Colin Leys and Stewart Player show that Cameron’s health and social care bill consolidates a plan that has been fermenting for many years.

The Plot Against the NHS #1

The Plot Against the NHS #2

 

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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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