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.

98% of RCGP members call for Health Bill withdrawal | GPonline.com

Almost all (98%) RCGP members think the RCGP should call for the Health and Social Care Bill to be withdrawn.

Over 2,500 RCGP members responded to the College’s survey asking them their views on the Bill. It closed on 6 January and the RCGP said it would be the last time it asked members for their views on NHS reforms.

On the launch of the survey in December last year, RCGP chairwoman Dr Claire Gerada said: ‘When we look back in years to come, I want there to be no misunderstanding of the position the College has taken or criticism that we did not do enough to inform and engage members or to protect patients and the NHS.’

The results found that 98% of GPs thought the RCGP should call for the Bill to be dropped under a ‘joint approach’ with other colleges.

Over 92% also said the RCGP should call for the Bill’s withdrawal even if the joint approach is not an option.

Two thirds GPs who responded to the survey said that they felt more negative about the impact the Bill would have on the NHS than they did in April of last year.

Nearly 90% of members thought that the Bill would result in increased involvement in the private sector. However just over 20% thought that the Bill would result in improved collaboration resulting in increased integration of health (and social care).

Private cosmetic clinics employing ‘unqualified’ surgeons | Society | guardian.co.uk

Experts voice concerns about level of training of private sector surgeons working on breast implants and nose jobs

Private cosmetic clinics are employing surgeons to carry out breast implants, nose jobs and tummy tucks who are not qualified to work as consultants in the NHS, the Guardian can reveal.

Experts are concerned about the level of training and qualification required of surgeons working solely in the private cosmetic industry. Many who trained in the UK reached only a basic level and are not on the General Medical Council’s specialist register, which means they are barred from becoming consultants in the NHS. Up to that point, in the NHS, a surgeon is still in training and will normally work under supervision.

The clinics say it does not matter, because their surgeons have years of experience in the procedures they do, which makes them just as good as any NHS surgeon. The private clinics also point out that all meet the standards of the Care Quality Commission, which regulates both the NHS and private sector.

But the revelation has shocked members of the expert group set up by the health secretary, Andrew Lansley, to look into the scandal of substandard breast implants and which has been asked to investigate standards in the cosmetic surgery industry more generally.

“I’m very concerned indeed that they are not on the register,” said Tim Goodacre, a plastic and reconstructive surgeon at the John Radcliffe hospital in Oxford and a member of the group. “That should be a bare minimum for independent practice in this country.”

Cancer researcher identifies high levels of doctor-patient trust and confidence within NHS

A leading cancer researcher has identified very high levels of doctor-patient trust and confidence within the NHS.

University of Leicester researcher Professor Paul Symonds also highlights the risk of jeopardizing this record of success if measures to become more cost effective are not carefully thought through and implemented.

In two papers published this month in the journal Clinical Oncology, Professor Paul Symonds of the Department of Cancer Studies and Molecular Medicine, assesses attitudes and beliefs concerning cancer care in the UK.

In one paper, Professor Symonds, who is also a consultant at Leicester’s Hospitals, and researcher Karen Lord highlight the importance of closer clinical relationships between physicians and cancer patients in helping patients cope with both treatment and diagnosis.

He said: “It is widely accepted that low trust between a cancer patient and their doctor can influence treatment outcome. The good news is that in Leicester we have found a very high level of trust in both hospital and primary care doctors. We must, however, understand the needs of particular patients when sharing sensitive information about the disease and treatment in order to maintain this trust.”

Professor Symonds research, funded by Hope Against Cancer, measured trust in healthcare professionals amongst ethnically diverse cancer patients and assessed the effect of this trust on the patients’ ability to cope when diagnosed with cancer.

In other news

Wikipedia in black-out protest over piracy legislation – UK – Scotsman.com

Wikipedia will black out the English-language version of its website today to protest against anti-piracy legislation under consideration in the US Congress.

The website will go dark for 24 hours in a move that brings added muscle to a growing base of critics of the legislation.

Wikipedia is one of the internet’s most popular websites, with millions of visitors daily.

“If passed, this legislation will harm the free and open internet and bring about new tools for censorship of international websites inside the United States,” insisted the Wikimedia foundation, the body behind the community-based online encyclopedia.

Related: Why Wikipedia went down at midnight – CNN.com

SOPA, PIPA: Google ‘Censors’ Logo To Protest Anti-Piracy Bills

 

Unemployment Figures Due Out Against Gloomy Backdrop

The latest state of the jobs market will be revealed on 18 January with new unemployment figures against a backdrop of increasingly gloomy predictions of redundancies.

Analysts expect the latest data will show another rise from last month’s figure of 2.6m amid predictions that the jobless total will not fall below 2.5m until 2016 at the earliest and will peak at 2.9m next year.

Africa aid delays are ‘costing lives’ – Africa – World – The Independent

Thousands of lives and millions of pounds were lost needlessly because of a “dangerous delay” in the response to the East Africa famine, a report has found.

A “culture of risk aversion” meant the international community failed to take decisive action on early warnings, causing a six-month setback in the relief effort.

Estimates suggest between 50,000 and 100,000 lives were lost between April and August, with more than half of that number under the age of five. Leading aid agencies have hit out at governments and humanitarian organisations as the report found they were “too slow” to spend money on those in need.

The report, A Dangerous Delay, showed only particularly high levels of media coverage helped.

There is an alternative: The case against cuts in public spending – PCS

The government’s cuts strategy – and why it’s wrong

Debt as % of GDP Firstly, we need to get the ‘debt crisis’ in perspective. The table opposite shows UK debt relative to other major economies.

From 1918 to 1961 the UK national debt was over 100% of GDP. During that period the government introduced the welfare state, the NHS, state pensions, comprehensive education, built millions of council houses, and nationalised a range of industries. The public sector grew and there was economic growth.

Today, the coalition government wants to turn back the clock. It is set on dismantling the NHS and comprehensive education, and it is attacking the welfare state. It is not doing this because the country is on the verge of economic collapse, it is doing it because it is ideologically opposed to public services and the welfare state, and committed to handing over more of our public assets to big business.

Cutting public sector jobs will increase unemployment. This would mean increased costs for government in benefit payments and lost tax revenue. If people’s incomes are taken away or cut through pay freezes they will spend less. Less consumer spending means cuts in the private sector, and lower VAT revenues.
Internal analysis by HM Treasury proves this to be the case. Leaked documents estimated that over the next six years 600,000 public sector jobs would be cut, and 700,000 private sector jobs would also be lost – based on the current government’s policies.

Job cuts are therefore counterproductive. Mass job cuts would worsen the economic situation by reducing demand in the economy, and providing less tax revenue.

The government claims it can make cuts of between 25% and 40%, and still “protect frontline public services”. This is impossible – not just because ‘frontline services’ are being cut, but because services rely on ‘back office’ support staff. For example, cutting support staff like NHS cleaners has meant an increase in healthcare acquired infections, costing the NHS £1 billion. All public services require tax revenues to fund them, yet HM Revenue & Customs has cut 25,000 staff in recent years, which has led to uncollected tax at record levels and a growing tax gap.

The impact is likely to be highly divisive too. There is evidence of this already in the UK. In areas where public sector workers have already been laid off, retail sales have fallen faster than the UK average. In nations and regions where public sector workers make up a high proportion of the workforce, major public sector cuts could destroy local economies. Any attack on the public sector will also disproportionately affect women, as 68% of the public sector workforce is female. The public sector also has a much better record of employing disabled workers too.

The global race to cut labour costs is central to the economic collapse we have seen around the world. Squeezed consumers are defaulting on mortgages and personal debts, and are less able to spend in the economy. In the UK, the value of wages has declined from nearly 65% of GDP in the mid-1970s to 55% today. Over the same period, the rate of corporate profit has increased from 13% to 21%. It is no coincidence that in this period trade union rights were severely restricted, large swathes of the economy privatised, markets deregulated and corporation tax slashed.

There is an urgent need to rebalance the economy in the interests of people over big business.

The experience of Ireland

Ireland shows how cutting public spending can damage the economy. The crisis in Ireland was caused by the collapse of its banking sector. The massive cuts in spending and public sector pay that followed have
increased unemployment and sapped demand, causing the economy to shrink further. Because of this, Ireland is now considered more at risk of sovereign default than before it started making cuts. Historical research clearly demonstrates that budget cuts actually provoke increases in the national debt by damaging the economy.


Economic growth and public investment

Investing in public services is the solution to the deficit crisis. Instead of cutting jobs, we should be creating them. Jobs are not created by bullying people on benefits into jobs that don’t exist. Instead there are several areas where public sector jobs urgently need to be created.

It has been estimated that over a million ‘climate jobs’ could be created if the government was serious about tackling both climate change and unemployment – these would include areas like housing, renewable energy and public transport investment including high speed rail, bus networks and electric car manufacture.

Today there are 1.8 million families (representing over 5 million people) on council house waiting lists. There is an urgent need to build affordable housing for these people, which would also help reduce housing benefit payments.

The UK lags behind much of the rest of Europe in the development of a high-speed rail network, which would have the potential to create thousands of jobs and reduce carbon emissions by shifting passengers and freight away from road and air travel. Much of the country outside of London also needs huge investment in bus services – and, just as we should invest in electric car technology, we should also invest in electric buses and tram networks.

Only 2.2% of UK energy comes from renewable sources compared with 8.9% in Germany, 11% in France, and an impressive 44.4% in Sweden. If we are committed to tackling climate change and ensuring domestic energy security there needs to be investment in renewable energy technology.

All of these industries would generate revenue – people are billed for electricity, buy tickets to travel on public transport, and pay rent for council housing.

Research by Richard Murphy (of Tax Research) has shown that the state recoups 92% of the cost of creating new public sector jobs – through lower benefit payments and increased tax revenues.

The banks

We should never forget that it was the banking sector that caused the recession, and is ultimately responsible for the huge debts that the UK has amassed. Despite causing the crisis, the banking sector has escaped any significant regulation, and bankers are again awarding themselves huge bonuses.

Government debt as of % gdb The table opposite clearly shows how UK debt accelerated after the banking crisis in 2008. As a result of the UK government’s £1.3 trillion bailout to the financial sector, the government still owns over £850 billion in bank assets. This figure is roughly equal to the total UK debt.

The UK has an 84% stake in RBS and a 41% stake in Lloyds TSB. In addition, the state also owns Northern Rock and Bradford & Bingley. Under public ownership and control these assets could yield significant annual income to the Government, and could be used to meet social needs and tackle financial exclusion.


The case against privatisation

As a result of the government’s agenda to slash the public sector, privatisation, outsourcing and the Private Finance Initiative (PFI) are a fast growing threat to civil and public services despite the many performance failures of past privatisations.

Privatisation is no solution to the national debt. Evidence confirms that after transfer to the private sector the terms and conditions of workers are worse than before, the public sector loses any revenue stream while ultimately keeping the risk, and services to the public decline or cost more:

  • In the DWP, welfare is now described as “an annual multi-billion pound market”, and despite the department’s own research showing that Jobcentre staff outperform the private sector in helping people back to work, all contracts for welfare programmes are now outsourced.
  • Qinetiq was a company formed from the privatisation of the Defence Evaluation and Research Agency (DERA). In 2007, the 10 most senior managers gained £107.5m on a total investment of £540,000 in the company’s shares. The return of 19,990% on their investment was described as “excessive” by the National Audit Office. In 2009, Qinetiq offered its staff a pay freeze.
  • Although the economic downturn has led to a drying up of bank finance for PFI projects, the government has got round this by funnelling public funds – through the Treasury’s Infrastructure Finance Unit – to state owned banks who then loan finance to PFI consortia (which then claim inflated returns to government for the next thirty years, greatly exceeding the money given to them). The journalist and antiprivatisation activist George Monbiot observed, “the Private Finance Initiative no longer requires much private finance or initiative”.

Public services were won by trade union struggles in an effort to establish the basis of a civilised society. Driven by the desire for maximum profits, the private sector fails to provide effective and efficient public services.


Tax justice

Addressing the ‘tax gap’ is a vital part of tackling the deficit. Figures produced for PCS by the Tax Justice Network show that £25 billion is lost annually in tax avoidance and a further £70 billion in tax evasion by large companies and wealthy individuals.

An additional £26 billion is going uncollected. Therefore PCS estimates the total annual tax gap at over £120 billion (more than three-quarters of the annual deficit!). It is not just PCS calculating this; leaked Treasury documents in 2006 estimated the tax gap at between £97 and £150 billion.

A comparison between levels of benefit fraud and the tax gap If we compare the PCS estimate of the tax gap with the DWP estimate of benefit fraud, we can see that benefit fraud is less than 1% of the total lost in the tax gap (see diagram opposite).

Employing more staff at HM Revenue & Customs would enable more tax to be collected, more investigations to take place and evasion reduced. Compliance officers in HMRC bring in over £658,000 in revenue per employee.

If the modest Robin Hood tax – a 0.05% tax on global financial transactions – was applied to UK financial institutions it would raise an estimated £20–30bn per year. This alone would reduce the annual deficit by between 12.5% and 20%.

Closing the tax gap, as part of overall economic strategy, would negate the need for devastating cuts – before even considering tax rises.

Our personal tax system is currently highly regressive. The poorest fifth of the population pay 39.9% of their income in tax, while the wealthiest fifth pays only 35.1%. We need tax justice in personal taxation – which would mean higher income tax rates for the richest and cutting regressive taxes like VAT and council tax.


Cut the real waste

While it is not necessary to cut a penny in public expenditure due to the ‘deficit crisis’, there are of course areas of public spending which could be redirected to meet social needs.

In the civil and public services, we know there are massive areas of waste – like the £1.8 billion the government spent on private sector consultants last year. The government could get better advice and ideas by engaging with its own staff and their trade unions.

There is also the waste of the government having 230 separate pay bargaining units, when we could have just one national pay bargaining structure.

There are also two other large areas where government costs could be cut.

Trident

The current Trident system costs the UK around £1.5 billion every year.

A private paper prepared for Nick Clegg (in 2009, when in opposition) estimated the total costs of Trident renewal amounting to between £94.7bn and £104.2bn over the lifetime of the system, estimated at 30 years. This equates to £3.3bn per year.

At the time Nick Clegg (now Deputy Prime Minister) said: “Given that we need to ask ourselves big questions about what our priorities are, we have arrived at the view that a like-forlike Trident replacement is not the right thing to do.”

The 2010 Liberal Democrat manifesto committed the Party to: “Saying no to the like-for-like replacement of the Trident nuclear weapons system, which could cost £100 billion.”

PCS policy is to oppose the renewal of Trident and invest the money saved in public services, whilst safeguarding Ministry of Defence staff jobs.

War in Afghanistan

The war in Afghanistan is currently costing £2.6 billion per year. The war is both unwinnable and is making the world less safe. More important than the financial cost are the countless Afghan and British lives that are being lost in this conflict.


The PCS alternative…

  • There is no need for cuts to public services or further privatisations
  • Creating jobs will boost the economy and cut the deficit. Cutting jobs will damage the economy and increase the deficit
  • We should invest in areas such as housing, renewable energy and public transport
  • The UK debt is lower than other major economies
  • There is a £120 billion tax gap of evaded, avoided and uncollected tax
  • The UK holds £850 billion in banking assets from the bailout – this is more than the national debt
  • We could free up billions by not renewing Trident
  • End the use of consultants

What you can do

  • Spread the word! Share this page with friends on social networking sites using the buttons below
  • Get involved in campaigns and events, and keep informed at our campaigns pages
  • Unite with other local trade unions and community groups
  • Recruit your colleagues to the union – there’s never been a more important time to join PCS
  • Lobby your local politicians against public service cuts and against the attack on our jobs and conditions

 

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

Continue ReadingNHS news review

NHS news review

Spread the love

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.

NHS consultants run 160 miles in protest at government health bill | Society | The Guardian

Bevan's run in opposition to the Con-dem coalition government's attack on the NHS. http://bevansrun.blogspot.com
Bevan’s run in opposition to the Con-dem coalition government’s attack on the NHS. http://bevansrun.blogspot.com

“The NHS will last as long as there are folks left with faith to fight for it,” Nye Bevan said of the organisation he founded in 1948.

Two NHS consultants took that message to the coalition government on Sunday by completing a 160-mile run, from a statue of Bevan in Cardiff to Whitehall, aimed at fighting plans to reform the NHS.

Clive Peedell and David Wilson, both cancer specialists at James Cook University hospital, in Middlesbrough, finished the equivalent of six back-to-back marathons in as many days to protest against the government’s health and social care bill.

At the end of Bevan’s Run, as it was dubbed, Peedell and Wilson delivered a mock postcard from Bevan to No 10 urging the government to drop the bill.

“It was a symbolic message to David Cameron and Andrew Lansley, that Nye Bevan would not have approved of what they are trying to do the NHS. He would have been appalled by it,” Peedell said at the end of the final run.

Along the route Peedell delivered a similar postcard to Cameron’s constituency office in Witney, Oxfordshire.

Peedell and Wilson completed the run wearing T-shirts bearing Bevan’s quote. They were greeted by up to 300 campaigners outside the Department of Health headquarters.

“When we saw all the people at Richmond House it was a real lift. It was a fantastic feeling to finish,” Peedell said.

“We did it to highlight opposition to the health and social care bill, which would increasingly privatise the NHS and undermine its founding principles which Nye Bevan outlined.”

Related: Bevan’s Run

Labour steps up opposition to NHS privatisation plans | Politics | The Guardian

Labour is to step up its campaign to block the government health reforms, accusing the government of allowing NHS hospitals to devote half their beds, appointments and car park spaces to the treatment of private patients.

The move represents a hardening of Labour’s opposition to what it regards as the privatisation of the NHS.

Shadow ministers admit privately that some Labour opposition has been hobbled by the coalition claim that they are completing Blairite reforms.

Labour released a clutch of emails from Liberal Democrat activists complaining that the party leadership was going beyond the mandate given by the party at the Liberal Democrat spring party conference in Sheffield in March. .

The health and social care bill has yet to receive its report stage in the House of Lords and Labour is still hoping Liberal Democrat peers can be persuaded to rebel. So far, such Liberal Democrat rebellions on the health and welfare bills have been small.

Speaking ahead of a Commons debate on Monday, Andy Burnham, the shadow health secretary, said: “David Cameron’s plan opens the door to an explosion of private work in NHS facilities, meaning longer waits for NHS patients and a two-tier health service in England.”

Burnham is trying to capitalise on the revelation that a government amendment to the health bill will allow an expansion of private work carried out in NHS hospitals by lifting the current cap from about 2% to 49%.

Con-Dems told to stop and rethink benefit cuts / Britain / Home – Morning Star

The Con-Dems faced calls to rethink savage cuts to disability benefits today after vowing to press ahead despite a humiliating triple defeat in the House of Lords.

Employment Minister Chris Grayling said the government “will seek to reverse the amendments in the Lords” when the Welfare Reform Bill comes back to the Commons.

Peers considering the Bill threw out a series of attacks on employment and support allowance (ESA) on Wednesday night.

They rejected a one-year limit on claiming ESA and insisted on at least two years instead, scrapped the time limit for cancer sufferers and voted that young disabled people unable to work should automatically get ESA.

Neil Coyle of Disability Rights UK said the government’s decision to press ahead with the reforms despite the Lords vote was ill thought out.

It could potentially lead to 300,000 legitimately disabled people losing their benefits, he warned.

“The government should use this opportunity to take a pause on benefit reform,” Mr Coyle said.

“The DWP are saying that the time limit would affect up to 700,000 people, with up to 300,000 disabled people losing all benefits, and the government is saying they are pressing ahead with their agenda.

“This is not evidence-based policy – it is purely about cutting benefits.”

In other news Chancellor George Osborne and others have been scaremongering that an independent Scotland would be unable to use the British pound. Scotland’s First Minister Alex Salmond responded that sterling is not under Osborne’s control. The debate is being incorrectly presented as a choice between the pound and the euro …

Independent Scotland ‘would lose the pound’ – Telegraph

Salmond hits back as pound takes centre stage – hei-fi-news – hei-fi – The Independent

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

Continue ReadingNHS news review

NHS news review

Spread the love

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.

High risk healthcare ‘will suffer if medical cover is privatised’ | Society | The Guardian

BMA warns that proposals to replace NHS Litigation Authority with private model ‘mimics worst aspects of US healthcare’

Potentially life-saving procedures could disappear from the health service because the high risks involved will force doctors to take out unaffordably expensive medical insurance, the British Medical Association has warned after it emerged that the NHS compensation fund may be privatised to curb the burgeoning cost of medical litigation.

Documents obtained under the Freedom of Information act show that last October officials in the Cabinet Office drew up a “business assessment” for the NHS Ligation Authority (NHSLA), which pays out legal fees and compensation claims in medical negligence cases, for a “credible business plan” that would be an “alternative to [the] existing service delivery model”.

The plan says the Confederation of British Industry has identified the litigation authority as a “potential opportunity” and suggests the “need for a joint venture partner” that could provide “investment, expertise, access to markets”. A month later the authority, which paid out £1bn last year in compensation – up from £280m in 2001 – was asked about pursuing a course of “mutualisation”.

Doctors’ leaders said any move towards a privatised model would mimic the worst aspects of US healthcare. In America there are well-documented cases where physicians simply do not take up jobs in risky specialisms such as obstetrics, where the cost of insuring operations are too high or where insurance companies fail to honour their moral obligations to pay out.

Breast implants scandal: clinics have ‘legal duty’ – Telegraph

Private clinics which fitted women with faulty breast implants have a “straightforward” legal duty to rectify the problem, politicians and lawyers have said.

Cosmetic surgery firms claim that the Government has a “moral responsibility” to pay for surgery to replace the French-made implants, because health regulators failed to identify the problem.

Earlier this week Mel Braham, chairman of Harley Medical Group, said clinics were “as much an innocent party” as patients were.

But Lord Howe, the Health Minister, yesterday (Thurs) told fellow peers: “We believe that private practitioners have in many instances a legal duty and certainly a moral duty to address these matters on behalf of their patients.”

Lawyers acting for women fitted with the implants, made by French firm Poly Implant Prothèse (PIP), said the clinics had a “statutory duty” under the Supply of Goods and Services Act 1982, to ensure the products they supplied were of “satisfactory quality”.

PIP’s implants were banned in 2010 when it emerged industrial-grade silicon had been used in them, even though they were sold as containing medical-grade silicon. Until then surgery firms were unaware of the fraud.

But Hugh Preston, a barrister at 7 Bedford Row in London, representing a number of women fitted with PIP implants, said: “This is not just a moral duty, but a legal one, and it is irrelevant whether the clinic in question is personally at fault for the product failure.

“All that matters is that the product is of unsatisfactory quality.”

Explaining the law, he said: “The patient has a straightforward claim against a provider of substandard goods for breach of contract, under the Supply of Goods and Services Act 1982.

“In any contract that involves the sale of a product, the product has to be of satisfactory quality. That’s exactly the same for whatever product a consumer buys, be it a toaster, a fridge, a car, or medical product.

“That is a statutory duty that the seller can’t get out of.”

Management in Practice – ‘Disillusioned’ CCG leads consider leaving posts

Many GPs are privately considering leaving their commissioning roles due to widespread disillusionment and distrust, the Chair of the NHS Alliance has claimed.

In his New Year message to NHS Alliance members, Dr Michael Dixon said current proposals for the National Commissioning Board will not allow CCGs the freedom to create an NHS run from general practice.

Rather, a “command and control environment” will be created and run from Whitehall – ensuring primary care “remains as the junior partner in NHS change”.

“Reports of a Commissioning Board with chief professional officers, senior clinical managers and National Clinical Directors are not promising and mention of a primary care clinician as a Deputy Medical Director seems frankly insulting,” he said.

In other news:

David Cameron distances himself from Top Gear ‘India special’ after High Commission lodges complaint – Telegraph

David Cameron has moved to distance himself from a ‘Top Gear’ India special in which Jeremy Clarkson and his co-presenters lampooned Indian culture.

Downing Street sources said the Prime Minister “did not like” the 90 minute programme, which was broadcast twice over Christmas, and stressed he had “the utmost respect” for the people of India.

The comments came after MPs warned the offence caused by the programme threatened Britain’s vitally important trading relationship with India.

The Daily Telegraph disclosed yesterday how the Indian High Commission in London had formally complained about the programme, and accused the BBC of deceiving it about the nature of what it planned to broadcast.

The Prime Minister appeared at the start of the programme , waving to the three presenters in Downing Street, and urging them to “stay away from India”. The presenters also read out a letter from Mr Cameron in which he jokingly advised them to consider “a fence-mending trip to Mexico”.

Last month, the BBC had to apologise after Top Gear presenter Richard Hammond made an insulting parody of Mexicans to describe a Mexican sports car.

Mr Clarkson and his co-presenters James May and Richard Hammond also tied banners to trains reading: “British IT is good for your company. Another banner said: “Eat English muffins”. The messages became obscene when the carriages parted, ripping the signs.

Legal aid shake-up ‘to cost more than half of saving’ | News

More than half the planned savings from Justice Secretary Ken Clarke’s legal aid cuts will be wiped out by “knock-on” costs for taxpayers elsewhere, a report warns today.

A study from King’s College London, commissioned by the Law Society, says the NHS, courts and other state organisations will all be hit by extra demands once legal aid reforms are brought in.

It says the extra costs will eat up £139 million of £239 million in savings estimated by ministers in three key areas of legal aid – family law, clinical negligence and social welfare. The Law Society calls the reforms “kamikaze“.

Coalition accused of abusing parliament | Politics | The Guardian

The government was warned on Thursday that it is running the risk of abusing parliament in its attempts to reverse a triple defeat in the House of Lords over plans to cut benefits for disabled people.

Labour, which accused the government of crossing the line of decency with its reforms, pledged to fight any coalition effort to use special parliamentary procedures to reverse the votes.

The row erupted after Lord Freud, the welfare reform minister, surprised peers late on Wednesday night by tabling a new amendment. Freud acted after peers rejected plans to means-test employment and support allowance (ESA) payments for disabled people – plus cancer patients and stroke survivors – after only a year. Peers also rejected plans to time-limit ESA for cancer patients and to restrict access to ESA for disabled or ill young people.

But the minister’s amendment partially reversed the vote on young people.

Lady Hollis of Heigham, Labour’s former welfare minister, criticised the Freud amendment – tabled after most peers had left parliament for the evening in the belief that there were no further substantive votes.

Hollis told peers: “I am sure Lord Freud doesn’t wish to appear to be subverting the view of the entire house, which was expressed in the full knowledge that the amendment which we voted on was devised as a paving amendment to a substantive one so that we could debate it in good time.”

Continue ReadingNHS news review

NHS news review: There should be no place for the profit motive when it comes to peoples’ health.

Spread the love

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.

I’m glad to see some commentary and analysis concerning the breast implant scandal and the NHS. Many private cosmetic surgery companies are refusing to replace sub-standard breast implants made by the French company PIP.

There are lessons here about private companies involvement in healthcare.

Firstly, the French company producing the sub-standard implants did it in the pursuit of profit. The company disregarded the health effects to patients of using prohibited substances and deliberately deceived inspectors to make more profits.

Secondly, many private cosmetic surgery companies are quick to take your money and hesitant in assisting their former patients when it becomes known that they have been pedalling sub-standard products. Clearly, this is the profit motive again. There should be no place for the profit motive when it comes to peoples’ health.

Thirdly, the NHS is there as a last resort … for now. What would happen once the NHS is abolished according to the scum Con-Dem coalition government’s plans? There would be nobody to care for people as a last resort. Former patients would be forced to pay again after botched surgery or suffer the consequences. Again, there should be no place for the profit motive when it comes to peoples’ health.

Dr Richard Horton, the editor of medical journal the Lancet discusses the NHS and the breast implant scandal.

NHS ‘will be destroyed’ by private health care companies, warns doctor – Telegraph

Dr Richard Horton, the editor of medical journal the Lancet, said the NHS was paying the price for a lack of regulation that has led to the breast implant scandal.

His comments came as Health Secretary Andrew Lansley prepared to make another statement to the Commons about what the NHS can do for women with PIP implants that are at risk of rupturing.

Speaking to BBC Radio 4’s Today Programme, Dr Horton said: “What we have seen in this latest episode is private sector providers of health care simply walking away from their responsibility to patients.

“The Secretary of State has absolutely no ability other than pleading with private sector companies to fulfil their duty of care to patients. We saw Andrew Lansley; all he was able to say was they have a moral duty and he asked them to do what the NHS was doing.”

He raised concerns about other kinds of common implants and devices such as hip and heart valve replacements.

“The way it was described at a recent safety of devices meeting was that we have a smokescreen of device regulation, which is unfortunately putting patients and surgeons at risk,” he said.

“What we will see with private providers is a fragmentation of the NHS, with no accountability, we will see no transparency, we will see the diminution in the quality of care.

“And unfortunately what we are seeing with the breast implant scandal is the future of the NHS, it will be destroyed.”

It has been estimated that the breast implant scandal could cost as much as £11 million after a top cosmetic surgery clinic refused to pay for operations to remove faulty implants.

The Department of Health said it would “pursue private clinics” but said it would help women who were refused surgery or care.

Cosmetic surgery companies’ responses:

Breast implant scandal: 9 in 10 women will use NHS – Telegraph

So far, eight private firms have offered to remove and replace faulty breast implants free of charge, if they performed the operation in the first place.

However, most of these only used the French-made implants on a relatively small number of women.

In total, the eight firms offering free removal performed breast enlargement operations used the implants on between 3,000 and 4,000 women.

By comparison, at least 40,000 women have been given the implants, made by now-defunct firm Poly Implant Protheses (PIP), in Britain over the last decade.

The firms that have agreed to offer removal and replacement are as follows:

Nuffield Healthcare

The first company to say it would fund removal (on Wednesday January 4) it used PIPs on about 150 women. The firm said it would meet all costs of investigation, further surgical treatment and removal, if needed, for all of them.

Spire Healthcare

Agreed on Friday January 6 to fund removal and replacement for the 1,500 women who had received PIPs through the company.

Linia

Said at the weekend it would remove and replace implants for some 1,540 women who had received them at the firm’s clinics, but only “when appropriate” and on a “case-by-case” basis.

BMI Healthcare

Has announced it will remove and replace implants for women who received PIPs at BMI’s clinics “at no cost”, and will also remove and replace implants for women who originally received them elsewhere for “a guaranteed fixed price package”.

In total, the two categories include some 1,311 women, although a spokesman refused to say how many had originally received them at BMI.

Ramsay Healthcare

Has agreed to fund removal and replacement after consultation with a clinician for some 150 former clients.

MYA

Will remove and replace PIP implants for the 46 clients who received them there in the past, free of charge.

Aspen

Has agreed to fund removal and replacement after consultation with a clinician for “just over” 150 former clients.

HCA

Has stated HCA will “meet the cost incurred” for those former patients who received PIPs and “require clinical investigation or further surgical support, including the removal of the PIP implant due to clinical need”, including the distress of having them.

UNISON Press | Press Releases Front Page

UNISON, the UK’s largest union, is calling on the government to learn lessons from the implant replacement disaster, and put a stop to its plan to hand over large swathes of our NHS to private companies.

The union has consistently warned that the moves – outlined in the Health and Social Care bill – would see profits put before patients. The case of rich medical groups refusing to remove potentially dangerous implants from worried patients is deeply alarming.

Christina McAnea, UNISON head of health, said:

“The Secretary of State is handing over large parts of our NHS to the private sector and he will be unable to control them. Appealing to these companies to do the right thing will not be enough. When will Andrew Lansley realise that his own Bill will render him increasingly impotent in intervening in such cases in future? It is time to drop the Bill to protect patients.”

In other news:

BBC News – BBC wins right to broadcast prisoner interview

The High Court has ruled that Justice Secretary Ken Clarke was wrong to stop the BBC filming a terrorism suspect held for seven years without trial.

The court said there was public interest in interviewing Babar Ahmad, due to the case’s exceptional nature.

The Justice Secretary had argued an interview was not necessary to inform the public about Mr Ahmad’s story.

Tories would have avoided coalition if boundary changes were in place in 2010 | Politics | The Guardian

The Conservatives may have been able to avoid entering a coalition with the Liberal Democrats had the 2010 election been carried out using the new proposed boundaries for the United Kingdom, analysis by the Guardian suggests.

Publication of new electoral boundaries for Wales comes in the wake of similar proposals for the other parts of the union and allows, for the first time, modelling of the effects of the proposed changes across the country.

Decision due on torture charges against MI5 and MI6 | Law | guardian.co.uk

British spies are expected to find out on Thursday whether they will face charges over their alleged complicity in the torture of terror suspects.

Several MI5 and MI6 agents are understood to be at the centre of criminal investigations into the treatment of former detainees including UK resident Binyam Mohamed. Prisoners at Guantánamo Bay have claimed British security and intelligence officials colluded in their torture and abuse.

The Crown Prosecution Service will issue a statement “announcing a number of decisions in relation to the investigations into the alleged ill treatment of detainees”. The announcement comes after human rights campaigners condemned the US government’s ongoing failure to close Guantánamo, 10 years after the arrival of its first inmates.

An inquiry into British complicity in torture and rendition is expected to begin after the police investigation delivers its report.

Liberal Democrats’ biggest donor arrested in the Caribbean | Politics | The Guardian

The Liberal Democrats’ biggest donor, who has been on the run for three years after being convicted of a multimillion pound theft, has been arrested by police in the Dominican Republic, the Guardian can disclose.

Michael Brown, who bankrolled the party with £2.4m of stolen money, was detained near the resort of Punta Cana on the easternmost tip of the Caribbean island this week. Interpol has been informed.

Named by City of London police as one of Britain’s most wanted fraudsters,

Brown, 45, disappeared while on bail for a £40m fraud and was sentenced in his absence to seven years in prison.

Continue ReadingNHS news review: There should be no place for the profit motive when it comes to peoples’ health.