LATEST
ARTICLES
Google puts power in patients’
hands
19 June 2015
The death of teenager Bronte Doyne from cancer after she was
told to stop googling her symptoms exposes how many
professionals want to ignore the advances of the information
age and cling to the old power relationship between doctors
and patients.
Bronte begged doctors to listen to her after online research on
an authoritative US website convinced her that her rare liver
cancer had returned. She died 16 months after being told she
would survive. Just days before her death she wrote: “Can’t
begin to tell you how it feels to have to tell an oncologist they
are wrong. I had to, I’m fed up of trusting them.” Her mother
described doctors at Nottingham University hospitals NHS trust
as aloof and evasive.
Of course, there are times when Google can be something of a
curse to doctors. GP Clare Gerada, while speaking eloquently
on the Today programme about the need to listen to patients,
also pointed out that Google had helped convince one of hers
who was suffering from a cold that the real problem was
dengue fever.
But the ubiquitous availability of medical information is
irrevocably putting more power in the hands of patients.
Read the full article on the Guardian Healthcare Network
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Who has the answers to NHS
funding?
9 June 2015
The big news at this year’s gathering of the NHS Confederation
at Liverpool’s docks was the announcement by NHS England
chief executive Simon Stevens of the massive intervention in
the three failing health economies of north Cumbria, Essex and
northern, eastern and western Devon.
Western Devon’s clinical commissioning group is already
predicting a deficit this year of almost £80m.
By way of justification Stevens pointed out that every other
approach – such as firing chief executives and providing short-
term bailouts – has been tested to destruction in these areas.
While the euphemistically titled “success regime” has been
discussed for some time, the scale and intensity of it marked a
significant ramping up of NHS England’s use of hard power.
This was not creating the conditions for success, but a
wholesale takeover by NHS England of a significant chunk of
the health service. It felt like the sort of thing his predecessor,
Sir David Nicholson, would have done.
This will make the central bodies – and to a significant degree,
Stevens personally – responsible for redesigning services in
areas with sometimes decades of poor performance. The
implication is that if this intervention doesn’t sort them out, then
the NHS has run out of ideas on how to turn round system
failure.
Read the full article on the Guardian Healthcare Network
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Stevens gambles on hospital
chains
22 May 2015
The announcement on Wednesday by NHS England chief
executive Simon Stevens of the development of hospital chains
is a huge gamble.
The idea of hospital chains is to make smaller hospitals
clinically and financially sustainable, by linking them with a
major regional centre. It builds on last year’s review of different
ways of running hospitals led by Salford Royal chief executive
Sir David Dalton.
In the current financial climate it is a bold move. Stevens is
calculating that hospital chains will help the NHS achieve the
barely-credible target of £22bn in efficiency savings over the
next few years while avoiding the need to burn up huge
amounts of political capital in local battles to close hospital
services.
It marks a decisive change of direction from the era of his
predecessor, Sir David Nicholson, who attached far greater
importance to the concentration of services in fewer, more
clinically and financially effective centres.
Hospital chains is a beguiling idea, which plays to that peculiar
algorithm of public service improvement that if you lump
together a good institution and a bad one you end up with two
good ones. As similar experiments in schools have
demonstrated, that is not always the outcome.
Read the full article on the Guardian Healthcare Network
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Hunt can’t keep ducking tough
decisions
12 May 2015
Jeremy Hunt mark 2 faces a tougher job as health secretary
than in the last parliament. Politically he did well to distract the
public from the folly of Andrew Lansley’s upheavals by
relentlessly focusing on the Mid-Staffordshire scandal and
ramming home the message that there have been real-terms
spending increases, however slender. Now he can no longer
postpone high-risk decisions over money and services – as
well as having to meet election promises to extend access to
primary and mental health care.
The overwhelming priority is to stabilise the financial system.
The Conservatives were fortunate to get over the electoral
finishing line without the rapidly deteriorating NHS balances
becoming a campaign issue. But the promise of an extra £8bn
above inflation by 2020 will not avert a crisis in the next two
years unless a substantial proportion of that is frontloaded and
the NHS delivers barely credible productivity targets. Prompt
action, however difficult, will be less painful for the government
than waiting until the problems are entrenched and they are
accused of letting the NHS slide into crisis.
Read the full article on the Guardian Healthcare Network
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Inside the murky world of NHS
rationing
24 April 2015
This week’s survey by HSJ revealing that 39% of clinical
commissioning groups it contacted were considering rationing
care to save money in the coming year highlights one of the
murkier areas of health policy and raises a number of difficult
questions.
Rationing is nothing new, of course. When waiting lists
stretched to many months and even years, treatment was often
rationed simply by the patient dying before they reach the
operating table. Heart surgery was a striking example of this.
The long waits in A&E departments acted as another form of
rationing.
Labour’s all-out assault on waiting lists and eventual
introduction of the 18 weeks referral-to-treatment target ended
this backdoor workload management system. Now the NHS
Constitution gives the impression that clinical need and
conformity with Nice guidelines are all that stand between the
patient and treatment, while the purchasing decisions of
commissioners should ensure that any rationing is open to
public scrutiny.
Read the full article on the Guardian Healthcare Network
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Facing truth about the funding
crisis
21 April 2015
The intervention by former NHS England chief executive Sir
David Nicholson in the election debate on the NHS exposes
the chasm between manifesto rhetoric and funding reality.
Nicholson pointed out that the political parties are promising
extra services while the Five Year Forward View from NHS
England—on which the widely accepted additional funding
need of £8 billion a year is based—makes hugely optimistic
assumptions about efficiency savings simply to get the service
repositioned for sustainability, without heroic promises about
more and better care.
The Five Year Forward View provides three funding scenarios,
the most optimistic of which is that the NHS gets the extra
money to enable it to invest quickly in new care models, which
in turn deliver efficiency gains worth between 2% and 3% each
year.
The Conservatives and Liberal Democrats have promised to
provide a real terms increase of £8 billion a year by 2020. But,
for example, the Conservatives claim that this will fund seven
days a week, 12 hours a day access to GPs; full seven day
working in hospitals; and a substantial expansion of mental
healthcare—as well as the reforms in the Five Year Forward
View.
Read the full article at BMJ.com
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Managers are more than
bureaucrats
9 April 2015
David Cameron’s insulting portrayal of NHS management in
last week’s leaders’ election debate as “a bureaucrat with a
clipboard” shows how little is understood about the vital role of
managers in running the health service. As the next parliament
looms, managers’ skills will be tested as never before. Will they
pass?
The skills which got many managers to the top in the past will
no longer be sufficient as the health service landscape
becomes ever more complex and demanding. The ebbing of
central prescription to make way for a greater variety of
commissioning and care models, coupled with the huge
financial stresses, means managers are having to think and
work in new ways.
Collaborating across the local health economy is now
imperative. Even the biggest institutions are unable to operate
as discrete organisations. But systems thinking is still perilously
weak in an NHS bent out of shape by an excessive focus on
competition.
Read the full article on the Guardian Healthcare Network
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Public Policy Media
Richard Vize