Public Policy Media
Richard Vize
LATEST
ARTICLES
Tide turns on privatising public
services
29 March 2019
The rebellion against privatisation is growing, with the tide
moving towards greater public control of key services.
The pushback can be seen everywhere. In an excoriating
assessment of a flagship government policy, the chief inspector
of probation, Dame Glenys Stacey, has used her final annual
report to condemn the part privatisation of the probation service
for a “deplorable diminution of the probation profession”.
The fatal mistake was to try to reduce what is a complex social
service to a series of contractually defined transactions. Stacey
makes clear that the government’s recovery plan – to terminate
contracts early and retender – is largely a waste of time,
because it will not fix the underlying problem that running
probation commercially won’t work.
NHS England has abandoned a bizarre scheme to force cancer
patients at the renowned Churchill hospital in Oxford to be
loaded into an ambulance and driven four miles down the road
to use private sector scanners rather than be scanned on site
by NHS staff.
The retreat came as Jeremy Corbyn joined the backlash and
Labour revealed plans to ban private companies from providing
services that deal with vulnerable people.
Read the full article at Guardian Society
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Perpetual failures of financial
incentives
14 March 2019
The King’s Fund wants to kill off the long-held belief in
government and the NHS leadership in England that it is
possible to devise a system of payments, incentives and
contracts which will take us to the nirvana of a perpetually self-
improving health service.
After 30 years of failure the NHS is embarking on yet another
attempt to devise the perfect payment regime. In its report
Payments and contracting for integrated care, with the punchier
subtitle “the false promise of the self-improving health system”,
the King’s Fund highlights the absurdity of clinging to this
shibboleth despite decades of evidence that it won’t work.
The NHS has set prices for around 3000 services, ranging from
£63 for the simplest A&E attendance to £40,550 for complex
cranial operations. Alongside this clinical shopping list is a
Heath Robinson construction of uplifts, carve-outs, caps,
bundles, blocks, baselines, risk transfers, gain sharing, loss
sharing, penalties and incentives designed to drive behaviours
around everything from adopting new technologies to how a
hospital is cleaned.
This system fails to achieve its objectives and inhibits clinicians
from improving care quality. It encourages treatment in
hospitals rather than prevention in the community and, as the
report says, there is scant evidence that incentive schemes
such as Commissioning for Quality and Innovation (CQUIN)
have delivered substantial improvements in quality or
efficiency.
Read the full article at the BMJ
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Children live in a hostile
environment
1 March 2019
Children in England are facing their own hostile environment,
with government policy undermining their right to a fair start in
life and support for families systematically dismantled since
2010.
First 1,000 days of life, published this week by the Commons
health and social care committee, exposes the extent of the
damage – and the impact it has had.
The MPs’ report lays bare the desperate need for coordinated
support for infants and their families. Under New Labour,
resources were poured in to supporting children’s early years.
Benefits were increased, children’s services were expanded,
child poverty was targeted, the Healthy Child Programme was
introduced and Sure Start centres were established across the
country.
But since the economic crash in 2008 and change of
government in 2010, public spending on children has fallen and
child poverty has increased, as evidence from the children’s
commissioner for England and the Institute for Fiscal Studies
shows. According to the Sutton Trust, somewhere in the region
of 1,000 Sure Start centres have closed – more than a quarter
of the total. The Institute for Health Visiting told MPs that 65%
of families are not formally seeing a health visitor after their
baby is aged eight weeks.
Read the full article at Guardian Society
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NHS and council tensions are on
the rise
15 February 2019
Who should run local health and care services, especially
public health services, is becoming an increasingly tense
battleground between the NHS and local government, with
serious potential consequences.
The NHS long-term plan, unveiled in January, aims to deliver
the “triple integration” of primary and hospital care, physical
and mental health services and health with social care. From
councils’ point of view, this is a unique opportunity to fix one of
the big flaws in the way the NHS was set up in 1948, with a
centralised service telling local services what to do, rather than
focusing on the needs of local communities.
With NHS community and mental health services – especially
mental health care for children and adolescents – set to be the
big winners in the scramble for funding for at least the next five
years, local NHS services and councils have a chance to focus
on tackling the root causes of physical and mental illness in
their area.
The NHS plan wisely avoids setting out precisely how this local
collaboration should happen, putting the onus on local leaders
to find ways to work together. Some are struggling.
Read the full article at Guardian Society
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The health impact of a bankrupt
council
5 February 2019
As the NHS in England begins implementing its plan for
spending its additional £20bn over the next 10 years, a growing
number of local authorities facing financial crisis are slashing
adult social care budgets.
The long term impact on health services will be profound,
affecting everything from hospital discharge to falls prevention
and rehabilitation. According to the Association of Directors of
Adult Social Services, councils in England are taking out
£700m from their adult spending this financial year, 4.7% of
that budget.
East Sussex County Council is planning to strip its services
back to a “core offer,” which includes reducing services for
vulnerable children and adults. Worcestershire County Council
is looking to shed around 200 staff—which will have a serious
impact on child and adult social care which accounts for almost
70% of its budget. Other councils facing serious financial
pressures include Cornwall, Lincolnshire, Somerset, Surrey,
and Torbay.
Northamptonshire County Council—whose problems have
been exacerbated by mismanagement—is in the deepest
trouble. Last autumn, it adopted a financial stabilisation plan:
targets include saving £700,000 by reducing long term care
placements from hospital and £1.8m from “new ways of
delivering care and independence.”
Read the full article at the BMJ
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Austerity-battered cities need
champion
1 February 2019
This week’s report spelling out the calamitous impact of
austerity on our major cities shows that much of the current
debate over public policy is looking in the wrong place for
answers.
Thanks to Northamptonshire county council blowing up its own
finances, Surrey using its muscle within the Conservative party
to highlight the damage being done by cuts, and areas such as
Somerset facing serious difficulties, an impression has been
created that English shires are suffering the most pain under
austerity.
Meanwhile, political debate on which parts of England need the
most support has focused on left-behind towns such as
Hartlepool, Grimsby and Barnsley, which have relatively low
educational attainment and registered their anger at the lack of
opportunity by voting strongly to leave the EU.
But the Centre for Cities’ analysis, and its fascinating study
published last year on which areas voted for Brexit and why,
rams home the point that cities as well as towns need support
in building their economic firepower.
Cities are the unrivalled engines of the economy, but have
been clobbered the hardest by austerity.
Read the full article at Guardian Society
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Patients and staff hold key to
NHS Plan
11 January 2019
The newly-unveiled NHS long-term plan reveals an
extraordinary breadth of ambition for improving healthcare over
the coming decade. While it includes exciting developments in
cutting-edge technology, such as gene therapy and artificial
intelligence, the greatest improvements in care and outcomes
will come not from scientific breakthroughs but from people: by
harnessing the power and talents of patients and NHS staff.
To stand a chance of the plan succeeding, the health service
needs to ensure clinicians have the power and responsibility to
make change happen and do far more to exploit the largely
untapped resource of patients themselves.
One of the plan’s key goals is to reduce unjustified variations in
performance, including significant differences in stillbirth and
newborn baby death rates. This can succeed only if frontline
staff are gien the skills, resources and encouragement to
improve quality. Clinicians have to believe they are leading this
locally, rather than simply being a cog in a national blueprint.
That needs to be central to the workforce strategy, the plan for
tackling thousands of NHS vacancies, when it is finally
published.
Read the full article at Guardian Society
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