Read NHS for Sale: Myths, Lies & Deception Online
Authors: Jacky Davis,John Lister,David Wrigley
© Tamasin Cave, Jacky Davis, Paul Evans, John Lister,
Martin McKee, Harry Smith, David Wrigley, 2015
irst published in 2015 by
The Merlin Press Ltd
99b Wallis Road
London
E9 5LN
ISBN. 978-0-85036-627-3
eISBN. 978-0-85036-716-4
British Library Cataloguing in Publication Data is available from the British Library
All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording or otherwise, without the prior permission of the publisher.
2 Myth: the NHS is inefficient and unaffordable – it can’t go on like this
3 Myth: our NHS reforms will mean more choice for patients
4 Myth: our NHS reforms will put GPs in the driving seat
5 Myth: our NHS reforms will reduce bureaucracy and save money
6 Myth: our NHS reforms will give more power and voice to local people
7 Myth: our NHS reforms will make the NHS more transparent and accountable
8 Myth: the private sector is more efficient and cost-effective than the public sector
9 Myth: we are not privatising the NHS
10 Myth: we will cut the deficit not the NHS
11 What they don’t want us to know
Appendix 1 The Health Lobbying Industry
Appendix 2 A round-up of NHS vital statistics under the coalition
Index
For much helpful and generous advice, our thanks go to Anna Athow, Prof. Colin Crouch, Prof. Colin Leys and Prof. Ray Tallis; we thank Peter Phillips and Glenda Pattenden for the cover concept and design, and tender particular thanks to Harry Smith for the foreword, Prof. Martin McKee for the introduction, and Tamasin Cave and Paul Evans for their contributions on the health lobbying industry and on NHS vital statistics under the coalition.
To the memory of Aneurin Bevan and to the frontline NHS staff who do battle for patients every day
5YFV
Five Year Forward View,
http://www.england.nhs.uk/wpcontent/uploads/2014/10/5yfv-web.pdf
.
A&E
Accident & Emergency.
AQP
Any Qualified Provider.
BMA
British Medical Association,
http://bma.org.uk/
.
BMJ
British Medical Journal,
http://www.bmj.com/
.
BUPA
British United Provident Association,
http://www.bupa.co.uk/
.
CCG
Clinical Commissioning Groups, (Commissioners),
http://www.england.nhs.uk
.
http://www.nhs.uk/Service-Search/Clinical-Commissioning-Group/LocationSearch/1
.
CCP
Co-operation and Competition Panel (Monitor):
https://www.gov.uk/government/groups/co-operation-and-competition-clinical-reference-group
.
https://www.gov.uk/government/groups/co-operation-and-competition-economics-reference-group
.
CHC
Community Health Councils, abolished in England in 2003; they continue to work in Wales,
http://www.wales.nhs.uk
sitesplus/899/home.
CHPI
Centre for Health and the Public Interest,
http://chpi.org.uk/
.
Clause 119 (HSC Bill)
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/health-26531807
.
Commissioning Support Unit (CSU)
http://www.england.nhs.uk/resources/css/
.
CSIG
Commissioning Support Industry Group private interests: e.g. UnitedHealth.
CQC
Care Quality Commission,
http://www.cqc.org.uk/
.
DHA
District Health Authority – no longer exists in England.
DoH
Department of Health,
https://www.gov.uk/government/organisations/department-of-health
.
ED
Emergency Department.
FoI
Freedom of Information (Act),
http://www.legislation.gov.uk/ukpga/2000/36/contents
.
FT
Foundation Trust,
http://www.nhsproviders.org/home/
.
GMC
General Medical Council,
http://www.gmc-uk.org/
.
Healthwatch
http://www.healthwatch.co.uk/find-local-healthwatch
.
HSCIC
Health and Social Care Information Centre,
http://www.hscic.gov.uk/
.
HSC
Health and Social Care Bill or Act 2012,
http://www.legislation.gov.uk/ukpga/2012/7/contents
.
HSJ
Health Service Journal,
http://www.hsj.co.uk
.
HWB
s Health & Wellbeing Board (directory),
http://www.kingsfund.org.uk/projects/health-and-wellbeing-boards/hwb-map
.
IRP
Independent Reconfiguration Panel,
https://www.gov.uk/government/organisations/independent-reconfiguration-panel
.
ISTC
Independent Sector Treatment Centre.
ITU
Intensive Therapy/Treatment Unit.
LATs
Local area teams,
http://www.nhs.uk/servicedirectories/Pages/AreaTeamListing.aspx
.
Monitor
https://www.gov.uk/government/publications/about-monitor-an-introduction-to-our-role
.
MHRA
Medicines & Healthcare products Regulatory Agency,
http://www.mhra.gov.uk
.
NAO
National Audit Office,
http://www.nao.org.uk/
.
NHSCC
NHS Clinical Commissioners,
http://www.nhscc.org/
.
NHS Confederation
http://www.nhsconfed.org/
.
NHSE
NHS England,
http://www.england.nhs.uk
.
NHS Support Federation
http://www.nhscampaign.org/
.
NICE
National Institute for Health and Clinical Excellence,
http://www.nice.org.uk/
Nuffield Trust
http://www.nuffieldtrust.org.uk/
.
OOH
Out of Hours.
PCT
s Primary Care Trusts, now replaced by Clinical Commissioning Group.
PFI
Private Finance Initiative.
PPI
Private Patient Income.
RCN
Royal College of Nurses,
http://www.rcn.org.uk
.
RCGP
Royal College of General Practitioners,
http://www.rcgp.org.uk
.
Section 75 Regulations
http://www.legislation.gov.uk/ukpga/2012/7/section/75/enacted
.
SHA
Strategic health authorities, abolished in 2013.
SPT
Strategic Project Team,
http://www.thestrategicprojectsteam.co.uk
.
TDA
Trust Development Authority,
http://www.ntda.nhs.uk/
.
TSA
Trust Special Advisor, Trust Special Administrator.
TTIP
Transatlantic Trade and Investment Partnership.
TUPE
Transfer of Undertakings (Protection of Employment).
UCC
Urgent Care Centre.
UH
UnitedHealthcare,
http://www.uhc.com/
.
UNISON
Public service trade union,
http://www.unison.org.uk
.
UNITE
Britain’s biggest union with 1.42 million in every type of workplace.
http://www.unitetheunion.org/
.
WHO
World Health Organisation.
An announcement has been made that hundreds of government websites will be moving to the gov.uk website
https://www.gov.uk
.
HARRY SMITH
Over ninety years have passed since I was born in the barbarous year of 1923 in the coalmining community of Barnsley. As the light fades on my life, I am drawn towards the narrow cobbled streets of my early life that were fraught with poverty and sickness. Back then existence was a hard scrabble battle for many Britons because we lived in a primitive era when there was no NHS and good health care was a privilege that only the rich could afford.
In the winter of my years, I don’t reflect upon my boyhood with nostalgia. It’s impossible since I learned too early in my days that life for those who can’t access a doctor or medicine due to financial circumstances can be a brief and sad affair. You see, in 1926 when I was a small lad my sister Marion contracted TB and died in a workhouse infirmary because my dad, who had worked as a miner since the age of twelve, was too poor to provide medical care for his daughter on a working-class salary.
Tragically during my childhood in the early twentieth century thousands met their end like Marion. I can even remember as a boy hearing the piercing cries from open windows on our street of people dying from cancer who didn’t have the dosh to buy morphine to ease their passage from life. To this day, I am haunted by the inhuman manner in which my sister’s illness was treated or how the society of my youth believed that only the well-to-do or well-connected
deserved medical care.
That is why after the brutality of the Second World War my generation of ordinary people demanded that our nation create the NHS. We knew it was our only hope of making life better for ourselves, our parents and our children.
The people of my generation sacrificed so much during the Great Depression and through the Second World War and the NHS became our peacetime dividend. The creation of the NHS was also our solemn pledge to future generations that we would be a civilized nation that would treat all citizens as worthy of care and compassion. The NHS is for me as great as Magna Carta because it freed millions from the tyranny of sickness and poverty to move forward and lead productive lives. We must remember that the NHS is as essential to our nation’s well-being as the armed forces are to protect us from foreign threats.
It is why today we ordinary citizens must be vigilant against governments and corporate interests that seek to dilute the NHS’s ability to deliver health care to all its citizens through privatisation. I am one of the last remaining people that can remember the cruelty of life before the NHS, and I can assure you that it is essential for Britain’s prosperity and social well-being that my past doesn’t become your future.
MARTIN McKEE
How did we ever let it happen? When the then Health and Social Care Bill was passing through parliament (or perhaps one should describe it as drifting, pausing on occasions for a rest, as it is now clear that the attention of the parliamentarians who were meant to scrutinise it was elsewhere), I used the pages of the
British Medical Journal
to ask whether anyone actually understood what the government was hoping to achieve.
1
The Secretary of State’s response was not reassuring, suggesting confusion even at the highest levels of government.
2
Parliamentary draughtsmen are not renowned for the quality of their prose, so they could be forgiven for some of the more turgid stylistic aspects of the Bill. What they are supposed to be good at, however, is rendering complex and often contradictory intentions into clear, explicit, and unambiguous rules. In this case, they failed abysmally. Yet the fault was not theirs. They had been given the impossible task of creating order out of chaos. The result, as has now become abundantly clear, is an Act that is in many respects incomprehensible, frequently contradictory, and causing those who must implement it to scratch their heads in bemusement as they struggle to decide whether what they are doing is even legal, let alone sensible.
3