Public Policy Media
Richard Vize
LATEST
ARTICLES
Prison collapse typifies age of
austerity
18 September 2020
The slow-motion collapse of England and Wales’ prison system
is a textbook example of the government’s repeated public
service failures in the age of austerity.
The mismanagement of the prison estate, exposed in a
scathing report from the Commons public accounts committee,
is a carbon copy of ministers’ numerous other foul-ups over the
past decade. There are starring roles for inadequate funding
and disastrous use of private contractors, with supporting parts
for squandering money by aiming for unachievable savings,
raiding capital budgets to prop up running costs, making big
promises with no credible delivery plan, and failing to join up
policy. Inevitably, it is all followed by yet more delusional
promises of future delivery and the piecemeal populism of
ever-longer sentences.
Prisons are the responsibility of HM Prison & Probation
Service, an executive agency of the Ministry of Justice (MoJ).
Its declared aim is to ensure they are decent, safe and
productive places to live and work.
But the last annual report from HM Chief Inspector of Prisons
for England and Wales said living conditions for most prisoners
were inadequate and some were squalid, including cramped,
bloodstained, flooded and filthy cells, rat, flea and cockroach
infestations, and broken windows.
Read the full article at Guardian Society
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Hancock never stops to count
the cost
21 August 2020
Borne on the tidal wave of his self-confidence, Matt Hancock
crashes from one unforced error to the next, never troubling
himself to pause to count the financial and human cost. His
latest masterstroke is to abolish the country’s public health
agency in the middle of a pandemic.
The National Institute for Health Protection announced by the
health and social care secretary this week brings together the
health protection parts of Public Health England (PHE) with
NHS test and trace and the Joint Biosecurity Centre. It will
focus on external health threats, especially pandemics.
Everyone who works in the UK public sector knows that
endlessly demolishing and rebuilding its structures undermines
morale, wastes time and money, haemorrhages expertise and
experience, and rarely solves problems.
Establishing this new organisation piles risk upon risk as we
head into a dangerous winter. It bolts together a privatised,
poorly performing test and trace system, a biosecurity centre
that barely exists, and PHE staff cut adrift with no clear idea of
their future, all under a temporary leadership. But none of this
troubles Hancock.
Read the full article at Guardian Society
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Failed ministers want even more
control
24 July 2020
As the UK begins to pick through the economic, social and
personal wreckage of our failed response to coronavirus, two
competing visions for the future are emerging: centralise,
control and privatise, or localise and disperse.
Both Downing Street and the health and social care secretary,
Matt Hancock, with an eye on the forthcoming public inquiry,
have convinced themselves that the weaknesses exposed by
our pandemic response were the result of too little power at the
centre.
Hancock expresses frustration that when he pulled on the
Public Health England lever there wasn’t much attached to it,
while both he and Boris Johnson are railing against their lack of
direct control over NHS England and its chief executive, Simon
Stevens. Ever the shrewd political operator, Stevens has
extracted huge amounts of additional funding from the Treasury
while keeping a low media profile.
But Hancock was the fundamental cause of the poor public
health response. Ignoring desperate pleas from local
government public health directors to be given a leading role in
tackling the pandemic, particularly around testing and contact
tracing, the government has instead used the private sector to
build new infrastructure such as the testing centres and
lighthouse labs from scratch, disconnected from councils and
the NHS.
Read the full article at Guardian Society
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Men’s attitudes caused mesh
scandal
10 July 2020
Julia Cumberlege’s report into avoidable harm inflicted by the
healthcare system exposes an institutional inability to listen to
patients in general and women in particular.
Her investigation into decades of failure batters the reputation
of the NHS, professional bodies, regulators, manufacturers,
private providers and policymakers.
Established by the then health secretary, Jeremy Hunt, in 2018
to examine how the healthcare system in England responds to
reports about harmful side-effects for medicines and medical
devices, it examined three notorious cases of treatments taken
by women: hormone pregnancy tests associated with birth
defects and finally withdrawn in the 1970s; the anti-epileptic
drug sodium valproate, which can harm children during
pregnancy; and vaginal mesh implants, a cause of crippling,
life-changing complications and unbearable pain.
The review only came about because of decades of relentless
campaigning by patient groups.
The story Lady Cumberlege uncovers is not of rogue actors or
localised problems but systemic, endemic failure to listen to, or
respond to the needs of, patients. After speaking to hundreds
of women, a pattern emerged of not being empowered to make
informed choices, not being heard, not being believed by
arrogant, intimidating doctors, a lack of understanding of
women’s health and feeling abandoned.
Read the full article at Guardian Society
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What is the Joint Biosecurity
Centre?
2 July 2020
What is it?
The Joint Biosecurity Centre brings together data analysis and
epidemiological expertise to ensure covid-19 outbreaks are
detected and brought under control quickly.
What will it do?
It will provide independent, real time national and local analysis
of infections, and will advise the government on how to
respond to infection spikes, such as by closing workplaces. It
will also look for clusters associated with particular parts of the
economy, such as pubs.
It will build on the UK’s public health infrastructure and
surveillance network—including the NHS Test and Trace
programme, Public Health England, the devolved public health
agencies, and researchers—to understand the covid-19 threat
at any given time. It is primarily for England; its relationship
with the devolved administrations has not been agreed.
It is modelled on the Joint Terrorism Analysis Centre,
established in 2003, which advises the government on the
appropriate terrorism threat level. A key role of the Joint
Biosecurity Centre will be advising the chief medical officers
across the UK on the appropriate covid-19 alert level.
Read the full article at BMJ
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