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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.

There is a noticably increase in news coverage. Let’s hope that the forthcoming party conferences pay attention.

Marching to save the National Health Service – PCS Comment – PCS

Patients, health workers, and supporters of the NHS will march through London later today (Wednesday 9 March) to protest at job cuts and the reorganisation of medical services in England.

The protest – called ‘Day X for the NHS’ – starts at 5pm outside the Royal London Hospital, Whitechapel Road, London, E1 1BB.

Joining the march will be speech therapists from Southwark, south London, who won some concessions after striking over a threat to cut eleven jobs.

It comes two weeks after the trade union-funded False Economy website revealed 50,000 jobs are set to be axed in the NHS.

Revealed: Government Secretly Uses Doctors to Spin Tribal War for NHS Hearts and Minds (oh! And £80 Billion)

An outsourcing company that hopes to make millions of pounds from the most radical shake up of the NHS is secretly providing the government with apparently independent GPs to help ministers sell their controversial reform to patients and staff.

Internal emails obtained by SpinWatch show that the arrangement was agreed just before Andrew Lansley, the health secretary, launched his bill last month to scrap primary care trusts and hand £80bn of the NHS budget to GPs and private health companies.

Tribal, the outsourcing firm with £150m worth of government contracts, supplied a list of friendly GPs to Bill Morgan, Lansley’s special adviser. Morgan is a former lobbyist for private health companies and Tribal confirms that it was in discussions with some of the GPs on the list about future lucrative contracts.

Pro-reform GPs are a key front in the public relations offensive behind Lansley’s health and social care bill, which is currently going through parliament.

UNISON Press | Press Releases Front Page

UNISON, the UK’s largest union, said today that management consultancy McKinsey’s involvement in one fifth of existing pathfinder consortia* was clear confirmation of Tory plans to drive NHS privatisation. Karen Jennings, UNISON Assistant General Secretary, said:

“UNISON has long been warning that the Tory’s titanic reorganisation would leave the door wide open for private companies to dominate our NHS – and here is the evidence.

“Just one private company – McKinsey – has already signed up one fifth of the pathfinder consortia, and we know other big companies are getting their teeth stuck into large chunks of the rest. They include management consultants and big accountancy firms like KPMG and Price Waterhouse Coopers.

“The health service is about what’s best for patients, not the bottom line. Less than two years ago McKinsey produced a much-derided report which called for more than one hundred thousand health workers to be sacked. Their vision for the NHS is clear, and was widely panned as being disastrous. This is the type of company the Tories are happy to welcome through the front door of our health service.”

NHS changes “risk making child healthcare worse” » Hospital Dr

Reforms of the NHS in England are putting the healthcare of children at risk, an article in the BMJ says.

The doctors and academics who wrote it say healthcare for children already lags behind the best European examples.

But they say giving GPs control over the lion’s share of the NHS budget could make the system even worse.

UNISON Press | Press Releases Front Page

Dave Prentis, general secretary of UNISON, the UK’s largest trade union, today pledged a massive fight-back against government plans to privatise parts of the NHS National Blood and Transfusion Service (NHSBT).

Speaking in London to an angry meeting of blood service workers from across the UK, Dave Prentis said:

“This is crunch time for the blood service. The government wants to open it up to private companies with DHL and Capita already in the frame. The prime motive of these companies is money and we will fight this all the way.

“The blood service is the Big Society writ large. Hundreds of thousands of donors regularly give up their blood to help save lives for free, untainted by the profit motive. If any part of the blood service was handed over to companies who are making a profit, then this turns the whole thing on its head.

Pulse – Profit shares will devalue general practice

The NHS is changing so fast that yesterday’s kite-flying proposal is already the new reality.

Just a week or so after Prime Minister David Cameron announced that whole tranches of existing public services would be sent out to tender, and here it is happening, at a primary care trust near you.

The pioneers of plans being piloted by NHS East of England insist providers of care pathways – likely to be GPs in partnership with private firms or possibly charities – will have to meet rigorous ‘quality’ targets. It’s hard to object to a bit of quality, and with a few outcome targets thrown in too, there’s a reassuring echo of the QOF. But this scheme, like another in Guildford also revealed over the past week, builds in another kind of contractual incentive that doesn’t seem quite so harmless. It hands providers the chance to boost profits by reducing referrals and driving down costs.

Schemes like these are supposedly about provision rather than commissioning, but either way the controversy they have generated goes right to the heart of one of the key arguments of principle on the NHS reforms – and one on which GPs are divided. Health secretary Andrew Lansley argues that GPs are the right people to hold budgets and commission services because it is they who take the clinical decisions that have the greatest impact on NHS costs. By ensuring the same people hold both the purse-strings and the stethoscopes, he believes the NHS can finally control its spiralling costs, by putting money at the core of every clinical decision.

Nick Clegg under fire from his own party over NHS plans | Politics | The Guardian

The Liberal Democrat leadership has signalled a willingness to rethink its stance on some NHS changes – such as the extension of competition and the accountability of GP commissioning – if the party’s spring conference this weekend votes to rein in the shakeup.

Norman Lamb, parliamentary adviser to Nick Clegg, said: “We listen to the concerns and take them back to government. This is the chance for the party to have its say. We are determined they will have their say.”

Strong support has emerged for an amendment to a motion at this weekend’s conference, demanding that the NHS, rather than the private sector, should be the preferred provider in the health service. The amendment also calls for commissioning to remain a public function, “using the skills and expertise of existing NHS staff rather than subcontracting of commissioning to private companies”.

It says commissioning should be made democratically accountable, and not conducted in private by GP commissioners, as proposed in the health bill.

Opponents rally to fight ‘NHS privatisation’ – politics.co.uk

Opponents of government plans to introduce competition to the NHS have rallied to challenge the plans, which they say would privatise healthcare in the UK.

The well-respected British Medical Association (BMA) is lobbying hard to remove a section of the health and social care bill which would introduce new powers enforcing competition.

The bill would create a new economic regulator called Monitor, with similar powers to the Office of Fair Trading, according to the traditional model of privatising industries, such as gas, water or telecommunications.

But opponents are concerned that Monitor would have a statutory duty to promote competition, something many health experts warn could damage the NHS.

NHS Should Not Be Run Like A Privatised Industry, British Medical Association Warns

The NHS should not be run in the same way as privatised industries such as water, gas, and telecommunications, the BMA says today.

The warning comes as MPs prepare to debate the sections of the Health and Social Care Bill relating to new powers to enforce competition in the NHS in England.* Under the Bill, the new economic regulator Monitor would have the same powers the Office of Fair Trading has under the 1998 Competition Act, following the model that applies to a number of privatised industries, including gas, telecommunications, electricity and water. It would also have a statutory duty to promote competition in the NHS.

In a new briefing paper, the BMA requests amendments to the Bill removing this duty. It raises concerns that:

  • * Monitor will focus more on enforcing competition than on the provision of effective healthcare
  • * Fear of being open to legal challenge could divert healthcare providers and commissioners from their key task of ensuring high quality care
  • * Existing NHS services could be at risk of arbitrary closure, despite being popular with patients and delivering high quality services

BBC News – NHS shake-up ‘like gas and water privatisation’

The shake-up of the NHS in England has been likened by doctors’ leaders to the privatisation of the gas, electricity and water industries.

Under the changes, regulators will be encouraged to ensure there is fair competition between NHS trusts and private health firms.

But the British Medical Association said the move could lead to some hospitals closing.

Hundreds of jobs face axe to save £50m at city hospitals – Top stories – Yorkshire Post

HOSPITAL staff at the country’s biggest NHS trust are bracing themselves for major job cuts under plans to make savings worth more than £50m.

Hundreds of positions are likely to face the axe at Leeds Teaching Hospitals NHS Trust as health chiefs battle with a new era of austerity in the NHS.

Details of the plans will be made public later today. Talks with unions are arranged for next week but it is expected managers will agree a savings programme worth £55.5m.

The cuts come after the NHS was ordered to make unprecedented efficiencies of at least four per cent in the coming year.

Queen Alexandra Hospital cuts 700 jobs – Public Service

The Queen Alexandra Hospital in Cosham, Hampshire, run by the Portsmouth Hospitals NHS Trust, has cut 700 jobs and ‘closed’ 100 beds. The hospital was rebuilt using private finance and opened in July 2009.

The 700 job cuts, mostly clerical and admin roles, are said to have been achieved by not replacing staff who left over the past 18 months.

The aim is to save £29m this year as the hospital strives to become a foundation trust but even with the cuts the hospital is likely to be £6m over budget.

Award-winning Birmingham mental health scheme under threat in NHS cutbacks – Birmingham News – News – Birmingham Mail

AN AWARD-WINNING Birmingham A&E service praised for saving the health service £3 million is under threat because of NHS cutbacks.

Health workers have been told their jobs are at risk at the end of this month due to lack of cash for the RAID project at busy City Hospital, in Winson Green.

The 15 staff at RAID – Rapid Assessment Interface and Discharge service –assess patients for psychological problems in City A&E ensuring they get the correct help as mental illness, drug addiction and dementia often go undetected and untreated.

It comes months after it won the renowned Health Service Journal innovation in mental health award last year for saving City Hospital millions of pounds by avoiding unnecessary admissions to medical wards.

English NHS Trusts Cut Back on Surgical Procedures – Hospital Management

A study by healthcare charity the Patients Association has revealed that the number of elective procedures conducted by NHS trusts across England dropped drastically in 2010.

The study found that there were 10,757 fewer procedures carried out in 2010 than 2009, including 11% fewer tonsillectomies, 6% fewer knee replacements, 3% fewer hip replacements and 51% fewer bariatric procedures.

Patients also had to wait longer for surgical procedures; an average of eight days longer for hip and knee replacements, and six days longer for hysterectomies.

Patients Association chief executive, Katherine Murphy, said that patients were being denied access to surgical procedures in 2010 that they would have had if they had needed them in the previous year.

A UNION protest aimed at protecting the National Health Service was held in Torquay’s Union Square yesterday and gathered hundreds of signatures opposing any cuts.

A UNION protest aimed at protecting the National Health Service was held in Torquay’s Union Square yesterday and gathered hundreds of signatures opposing any cuts.

Members of the health union Unison handed out leaflets and had a coffin representing the death of the NHS.

The union is concerned the speed of planned cuts may lead to them being pushed through unchallenged.

25,000 demand Cameron stops the ‘BloodMoney’

Unite’s campaign to stop the privatisation of the NHS Blood Service has received huge public support which is still growing. In under a week, the union’s petition demanding that David Cameron stops the blood money was signed by 25,000 people (see link in notes to editors).

The petition was launched last Friday (4 March) and the Twitter campaign #bloodmoney began yesterday 9 March. In just one day almost 10,000 signed up.

On 16 February the Health Service Journal learned that the Department of Health’s commercial directorate held talks with private providers about running parts of the NHS Blood and Transplant service. Capita and DHL are understood to be interested in taking over parts of the service (see link notes to editors).

The campaign has struck a chord with the general public who have been signing up at record speed for a Unite petition. The public is right to be concerned, a study conducted in New Zealand found that there was opposition to profit being made from blood, with 52 per cent of donors unlikely to continue donating if this occurred (see link in notes to editors).

Private Firms To Bid For Whole Slices Of Healthcare Under Major NHS Sell-Off, UK

All aspects of NHS care for entire diseases are to be put out to tender under radical plans to dramatically expand the role of private companies and charities in running the health service, Pulse can reveal.

A pilot set to launch across the east of England will put entire NHS care pathways out to tender, starting with musculoskeletal medicine, respiratory care and elderly care.

The plans will hand private firms, GPs or combinations of the two provider contracts for a fixed amount of money, creating an ‘incentive’ to increase profit margins by delivering cheaper care out of hospital.

Pulse – Scottish GPC leader launches broadside on ‘market-based’ NHS reform

The leader of the Scottish GPC has attacked NHS reforms in England as dangerous for patients, and set out an alternative strategy for Scotland’s health service.

Addressing the Scottish LMC Conference in Clydebank today, GPC chair Dr Dean Marshall said the consequences of reforms to increase competition in the NHS could be ‘severe’ for patients.

‘I want to send a message to our politicians in both England and Scotland. Our health service is not a factory, the health service cannot be treated like a commercial enterprise, our patients are not a commodity.

‘We do not support the market-based reforms being pushed through in England, where the consequences for patients could be severe indeed. Scotland’s GPs will support colleagues in England to preserve the founding principles of the NHS.’

Management in Practice – Management warning over NHS reforms

Exceptional management will be required in the NHS over the coming years as radical reforms to the health service are implemented, a new report has claimed.

The drastic overhaul of the health service will see the commissioning responsibilities handed over to GP consortia from strategic health authorities and primary care trusts, which will be axed.

The Nuffield Trust said that the new organisations emerging from the restructure will need to focus solely on managing the transition period. It added that if they try to take on too much work in their early stages, they would most likely come up against some serious challenges.

One of the demanding targets that have been imposed on the NHS by the government is to cut back £15bn to £20bn a year in ‘efficiency savings’.

Management in Practice – GPs seek private advice on NHS reforms

Private management consultants have been recruited by GPs seeking advice on the government’s controversial reforms set to transform the NHS.

The changes to the health service will see the responsibility of commissioning transferred to GP consortia from strategic health authorities and primary care trusts, which will then be axed. This means that GPs will be responsible for the handling of around £80bn of the NHS budget.

More than two dozen GP consortia have been working with consultancy firm McKinsey in an attempt to get a better idea of how the new arrangements will work out.

”The government isn’t listening on the NHS” – Public Service

The government seems committed to charging forward with NHS reforms and not having constructive dialogue despite the warnings of the British Medical Association and other organisations, writes Dr Laurence Buckman, chairman of the BMA’s GPs committee, in the latest edition of Public Service Review: Health and Social Care

The government has recently responded to its consultation on the health white paper for England ‘Liberating the NHS’, which was published in July 2010. The British Medical Association (BMA) waited with interest to see if the government would take our concerns, and those of many other organisations, on board. Unfortunately, we saw little evidence in the government’s response that it is genuinely prepared to engage with constructive criticism of its plans for the NHS.

The BMA’s consultation response set out its belief that the white paper is good in parts, bad in parts, and lacking detail in others. We emphasised doctors’ concerns about the potential damage that could be done by the continuation of the internal market in the NHS and plans to accelerate competition. In particular, the BMA is concerned by the insistence on there being ‘any willing provider’, which will mean many different providers competing for services. While choice has been proven to drive up standards in other industries, the NHS does not operate like a normal market. Generating more work may increase income and profit in other sectors, but the more the NHS does, the more it costs the taxpayer. Having many different providers competing to run services is wasteful, bureaucratic and inefficient, and these plans are coming at a time when the NHS is expected to find billions of pounds in efficiency savings.

Doctors are also concerned about what this will mean for services. For example, could collaboration between GPs and a group of specialists at the local hospital be seen as anti-competitive and, therefore, be stopped by the new health regulator? Patients would find this hard to understand, but that is the possibility when competition is seen as more important than collaboration.

Patients waiting longer for cancer tests – Public Service

The number of NHS patients who wait months for cancer and heart disease tests has shot up in the last year, according to Department of Health (DH) figures.

The figures show that in January 2010 there were 7,080 patients waiting longer than six weeks for diagnostic tests but 12 months later there were 11,363. Also, the number of patients waiting for heart scans tripled over the year, and the numbers waiting six weeks for MRI scans went up by 175 per cent.

However, the DH said: “The NHS undertakes millions of diagnostic tests every month and patients continue to receive timely access to these tests. It is not unusual to see seasonal variations in waiting times. Given the pressure seasonal flu and other winter bugs played, it is not surprising that more people will have waited until January before their diagnostic tests.”

The shadow health secretary John Healey told the Daily Telegraph: “This is further evidence of frontline pressures emerging in the NHS, as the government forces through a wasteful reorganisation of the internal bureaucracy.”

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