LATEST
ARTICLES
Ministers show bad judgment on
growth
21 September 2012
As the economy falters the government is not so much
pursuing a comprehensive growth strategy as frantically
searching for things to throw out of the basket before the
balloon hits the ground. Local government controls are among
the first objects to hand.
Planning rules are a major target for the deregulators. But in
their haste to stimulate economic activity ministers are ignoring
the fact that planning is a great deal more than red tape. It is, in
part, about conflict resolution – between competing strategic
priorities when looking at the big picture, and about personal
wellbeing when it comes to your neighbours plans for their
house.
Read the full article on the Guardian local government network
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Jeremy Hunt needs to shut some
services
20 September 2012
As health secretary Jeremy Hunt struggles to get to grips with
his new brief, it will become increasingly clear to him that the
big issue he faces is shutting services. Lots of them.
The evidence supporting the case for widespread
reconfiguration of services keeps piling up. Just in the last few
days Dr Hilary Cass, president of the Royal College of
Paediatrics and Child Health, used a fascinating interview with
the Guardian's Denis Campbell to point out that it simply isn't
safe, let alone financially viable, to maintain the current 218
children's inpatient units. Poor quality in some of these centres
appears to be contributing to the UK's high child mortality rate.
Read the full article on the Guardian healthcare network
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Can doctors trust Hunt with the
NHS?
7 September 2012
Jeremy Hunt’s first steps as health secretary for England were
inelegant. He tripped this week over a parliamentary early day
motion that he had signed five years ago supporting
homeopathic hospitals and also a letter to a constituent
supporting homeopathy.
The Department of Health claimed that his views had “moved
on,” but it is a stumbling start that will focus attention on
whether he bases his decisions on evidence. As one prominent
medical figure put it: “This has attracted considerable comment.
He needs to remember doctors are scientists. There is now
considerable scepticism [about him], and he will have to prove
himself.”
Read the full article at the British Medical Journal
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Pickles guerrilla warfare
continues
7 September 2012
While Eric Pickles retains his grip on the Department for
Communities and Local Government, changes in the ministerial
foothills could influence the coalition's approach to councils.
Greg Clark goes to the Treasury but keeps his cities minister
role as well as being involved in economic policy. This presents
an opportunity for cities to push themselves towards the centre
of government thinking on how to stimulate and restructure the
economy. Clark appeared energised by the potential of cities,
and his city deals have been one of the most significant
developments in local government under the coalition.
Read the full article on the Guardian local government network
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Lansley had to go - what’s left for
Hunt?
6 September 2012
There should be no sentiment about Andrew Lansley's
departure as health secretary, no matter how hard he worked,
how gutted he is to lose the Tory health brief after nine years or
how much he cared about the health service. By every
measure of high political office, he was a disaster and he
deserved to be sacked.
As a strategist, he failed to look for the most pragmatic way to
achieve his desired outcome. He simply would not recognise
that taking a wrecking ball to NHS structures – at a time of
intense financial stress, rising demand and the necessity for
widespread changes to clinical practice – was foolish. He
compounded this mistake by imposing a structure that
resembles a London tube map. Compare that with Michael
Gove's pragmatic approach of bending the existing academy
programme to his will.
Read the full article on the Guardian healthcare network
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The good, bad and ugly of local
politics
24 August 2012
The big three parties are as dominant as ever in local politics.
According to the Elections Centre at Plymouth University,
independents and small parties such as the Greens and the UK
Independence party have been putting up more candidates and
therefore securing a bigger proportion of the vote, but the first-
past-the-post voting system means they get scant reward in
terms of seats.
In 2011, for example, the Green party received 3.6% of the vote
but only 0.8% of the seats.
Councillors matter to the national parties both as a barometer
of support and as the foot soldiers for the general election
campaign; several years of being drubbed in local elections
destroys morale and means many local activists and defeated
councillors simply fail to turn up to do the hard work.
Read the full article on the Guardian local government network
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NHS overseas could be good for
patients
23 August 2012
The government's announcement of a renewed push to market
the NHS abroad could help improve patient care in the UK –
but there are risks.
The Department of Health (DH) and UK Trade and Investment
want more leading hospitals to follow the example of world
renowned institutions such as Moorfields eye hospital and
Great Ormond Street children's hospital by establishing
franchises abroad.
The move was welcomed with unrestrained enthusiasm by the
NHS Confederation, which believes the health service could
secure a slice of the estimated £2.5 trillion global healthcare
industry and reinvest the money at home. But the Patients
Association fears it would be a distraction from implementing
the government's health reforms and finding £20bn of
productivity gains.
Read the full article on the Guardian healthcare network
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The tough lessons from
Winterbourne
9 August 2012
The serious case review of the Winterbourne View hospital
scandal has powerful messages for commissioners and
providers of care in the reformed NHS.
The findings of the independent review conducted for South
Gloucestershire council's adult safeguarding board are
reminiscent of child abuse investigations in the 1980s and
1990s – overlapping authorities failing to spot warning signs or
share evidence.
Even without witnessing the abuse taking place in the hospital,
there were warning signs of poor care in NHS records. For
example, patients ended up in A&E on 78 occasions, but there
was no alert system in place to tell clinical staff about previous
visits, so any evidence of a pattern of poor care was lost. Over
three years there were 29 police contacts with the hospital and
they successfully prosecuted a member of staff, while the
council had received 40 safeguarding alerts.
Read the full article on the Guardian healthcare network
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Is a Frome flash mob localism’s
future?
3 August 2012
A flash mob? Soaring election turnout? Guerrilla tactics?
Welcome to local democracy, Frome style. It has important
lessons for other councils.
Frome in Somerset is one of those west country market towns
whose attractiveness to the passing visitor masks significant
disparities in wealth and opportunity. In January 2011 five
locals, frustrated with the town council, set up Independents for
Frome. They put a letter in a local newspaper announcing a
meeting in a pub and were stunned when 86 people turned up.
Their leader is Mel Usher, former chief executive of South
Somerset district council and the first executive director of the
Improvement and Development Agency (which was an
autonomous arm of the Local Government Association) from
1998 until 2002.
Read the full article on the Guardian local government network
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Are junior doctors a burden or
asset?
26 July 2012
Junior doctors are often more associated with increasing death
rates than raising standards in the public's mind, and have
seemed more tolerated than embraced. But attitudes towards
this vital and substantial section of the NHS workforce are
changing.
As the next intake of junior doctors prepare to take their first
steps on the ward in August, the General Medical Council has
published its annual survey of UK doctors in postgraduate
training. With more than 51,000 of the 54,000 eligible doctors
responding, it could hardly be more authoritative.
While there was a high degree of satisfaction with much of their
training, around one in 20 raised concerns about patient safety.
Acute services accounted for many of these problems, which
the GMC said may indicate "some significant issues across the
UK".
Read the full article on the Guardian healthcare network
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True impact of spending cuts
revealed
20 July 2012
Government figures published this week reveal the true impact
on local government services of two years of cuts.
On Wednesday, the Department for Communities and Local
Government and public sector accountancy body, the
Chartered Institute of Public Finance and Accountancy, which
seems to have a remarkably low profile considering the
intensity of debate around the management of public money,
revealed that local authority spending this year will fall below
that for 2007-08.
Total service expenditure by local authorities in England is
estimated to fall by 4.8% this year to £94.7bn. Last year,
spending fell by 5.7% to £99.5bn. Average spending for each
person this year will be £1,814, a reduction of £238 a person
compared with the spending peak in 2010-11 of £2,052.
Planning and development has been clobbered the hardest,
down almost a third last year and almost 8% this year.
Highways and transport is not far behind, down 20.7% last year
and another 5.9% this year – figures which need to be seen in
the context of increasing damage from extreme weather and a
worrying rise in road deaths after several years of decline.
Read the full article on the Guardian local government network
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Mandate balances control and
freedom
12 July 2012
The publication of the government's draft mandate for the NHS
is big news for managers and clinicians. It sets out the priorities
for the NHS Commissioning Board for the next two years and
beyond. What is in the final version and how the board delivers
it will have a profound impact on the culture and practice of the
new NHS.
Until now the key NHS document has been the annual
operating framework, the embodiment of the command and
control culture which spells out the targets, priorities and rules
NHS bodies must follow. The mandate is intended to be more
long-term than the operating framework has been, promising
stability rather than lurching from priority to priority as the
political winds change.
Read the full article on the Guardian healthcare network
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Councils are doomed, so what do
we do?
6 July 2012
We're doomed. It's official. The Local Government Association's
dryly titled Funding Outlook for Councils from 2010/11 to
2019/20, launched last week, shows that eight years from now
there will be little money to spend on anything apart from social
care and waste. So what is to be done?
The LGA paper should be read by all local government
managers and politicians. It is an impressive analysis of both
the prognosis for long-term funding and the implications for
public policy.
The response to the document by communities secretary Eric
Pickles is noteworthy for what he did not say as well as what he
did. In his speech to the LGA's annual conference he did not
accuse the LGA of shroud-waving – the optimistic assumptions
on efficiency savings and income underpinning the projections
rendered such an accusation untenable.
Read the full article on the Guardian local government network
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Public Policy Media
Richard Vize