LATEST
ARTICLES
Lansley slammed for refusal to
lead
29 June 2012
At last week's NHS Confederation conference, the health
secretary Andrew Lansley was battered by the biggest hitters in
the health service over his cowardice on moving and closing
services.
Opening the conference Mike Farrar, respected chief executive
of the confederation, almost begged for some political
leadership on the issue of "service reconfigurations".
He warned the NHS was endangering lives by "almost waiting
for services to fail". The announcement just five days later of
the financial troubles of the South London Healthcare Trust
lends weight to his contention. He argued the NHS needs to
take the difficult decisions to move some care – notably for
patients with dementia – out of hospitals into the community,
while specialist services need to be concentrated in fewer
centres to improve outcomes. In other words, avoid losing lives.
Read the full article on the Guardian healthcare network
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Councils’ biggest storm is still to
come
22 June 2012
Councillors and managers gathering in Birmingham next week
for the Local Government Association (LGA) annual conference
have survived the first months of the financial storm in
surprisingly good shape. But they are now preparing for far
worse to come.
The speculation is that the next comprehensive spending
review could result in a further cut as high as 20% on top of the
existing 30%. Communities secretary Eric Pickles has got away
for far too long with perpetuating the myth that sorting out the
back office and sharing chief executives is going to deliver the
required savings.
SRead the full article on the Guardian local government
network
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How will managers lead the new
NHS?
20 June 2012
As the reforms enshrined in the Health and Social Care Act
take shape, no one knows where the power lies, who will lead
the system or whether the weakest trusts will be left to the
predations of the market.
From next April responsibility for buying around £60bn of
healthcare services, mainly from hospitals, will move from
primary care trusts to local clinical commissioning groups
(CCGs) led by GPs. Nationally, the new NHS Commissioning
Board will set standards, hold the commissioning groups to
account and implement policy priorities laid down by the
government.
As money for providers gets tighter, services will need to be
"reconfigured" to produce savings, such as by moving specialist
services to regional centres. But will changes be planned, or
will they be triggered by a weak trust getting into financial
difficulties?
Read the full article on the Guardian healthcare network
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Leaders need to bring order to
chaos
14 June 2012
Next week managers meeting in Manchester for the annual
NHS Confederation conference will be looking to the health
service leadership to bring order to the chaos of the reforms.
Key signals on the way ahead will come from four major
players - two new, one unassailable and one mortally wounded.
Health secretary Andrew Lansley will be taking to the stage on
the eve of doctors taking industrial action over pension reform.
This will give him an easy way to distract attention from more
pressing long-term concerns. If he is moved or dropped in the
expected reshuffle this may be Lansley's last major speech to
the health world.
Read the full article on the Guardian healthcare network
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Pickles’ puerile high street revival
plan
8 June 2012
This week saw the latest instalment of the government's witless
approach to regenerating the country's high streets.
Following the platitude-strewn high street review by Mary
Portas, who likes to be known as "the queen of shops", we now
have what the Department for Communities and Local
Government is billing as "Eric Pickles' local shop parades plan".
His plan: "Parades to be proud of: strategies to support local
shops" is patronising drivel. Only a council unaware that it
actually has shops could find it useful. It reveals, for example,
that it is a good idea for markets to have a website, clinics can
help pharmacies, and you should do something interesting with
empty shops.
Read the full article on the Guardian local government network
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Time for shift away from NHS
managers
31 May 2012
Moves to shift power from managers to clinicians will be all but
worthless unless clinicians in turn cede power to patients. And
patients are the managers' best hope for securing better and
cheaper services.
It is an extraordinary British tradition that our brightest
schoolchildren yearn to spend years training for modestly
remunerated jobs in a nationalised industry – as doctors in the
NHS. The realisation that the long term viability of the health
service requires heroic improvements in quality and productivity
is compelling managers to liberate the immense talents of
these, and all their other, clinical staff.
Read the full article on the Guardian healthcare network
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Hard-won progress on
integration
31 May 2012
The same patient was admitted to an emergency department
19 times in six months with hypoglycaemia, but no one ever
told his diabetes consultant in the same hospital. The North
West London integrated care pilot is working to ensure that
never happens again.
The pilot was launched in 2011 to meet the needs of people
with diabetes and those aged over 75. It brings together
primary care, community services, acute care, social care, and
mental health.
Read the full article at the British Medical Journal
The article was discussed for several minutes at the Health Select Committee
hearing on 26 June 2012 on integrated care, beginning at 12.25.
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Councils offer a new education
future
25 May 2012
In January this column highlighted the urgency of local
government redefining its role in light of the government's
school reforms. Over the past two years perceptions of the
academy movement have shifted.
When, under Labour, about 200 of the poorest performing
schools were given academy status, it was seen as freeing
them from local government control. Now the number is
climbing past 1,600, it looks like a school system that is
simultaneously fragmenting and being centralised under the
increasingly interventionist education secretary Michael Gove.
Read the full article on the Guardian local government network
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Services collapse exposes
reform cracks
17 May 2012
Just weeks after the health reforms passed into law, serious
cracks have emerged in the new system that could derail both
the quality and financial stability of NHS services.
The NHS Commissioning Board has revealed that as a result of
its "Checkpoint 2" tests for the viability of the plans for 25
regional commissioning support services, two have had to be
abandoned: West Mercia and Peninsula (Devon and Cornwall).
A further nine require "more rapid management" to stop them
from failing.
The support services are often wrongly described as providing
"administrative functions" for clinical commissioning groups.
Read the full article on the Guardian healthcare network
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The unforgivable failure on social
care
11 May 2012
The government's refusal to introduce a comprehensive social
care reform bill is an unforgiveable failure of leadership.
Ministers spout slogans about joined up policymaking while the
most critical issue facing us after the economy is trapped
between a discredited health secretary and an intransigent
Treasury. And it affects the whole of local government.
The Queen's speech included provision for a children and
families bill while leaving some of the most vulnerable family
members in dire need. The government had an opportunity to
act, and has baulked.
Read the full article on the Guardian local government network
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Can NHS escape centralised
control?
3 May 2012
More than most organisations, the culture of the NHS starts at
the top. As implementation of the reforms gathers pace, can the
old leadership deliver a new culture that liberates managers
and clinicians?
In the health white paper in 2010 the government promised to
"free staff from excessive bureaucracy and top-down control".
As the structure and processes of the new system have started
to take shape, it has become clear that freedom is no longer on
offer. The best the new clinical commissioning groups (CCGs)
can hope for is extended parole.
Read the full article on the Guardian healthcare network
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Can the markets ever work for
councils?
27 April 2012
Despite the apparent collapse of Suffolk's "commissioning
council" plans (I say apparent because they are quietly
implementing many of their ideas but without frightening the
residents with any more talk of "burning platforms"), local
authorities are still grappling with how to make commissioning
and markets work for them as budgets fall.
Many of the issues were aired at a seminar hosted by the
Institute for Government last week. Just as being force fed is
unlikely to increase one's appreciation of food, local
government has never quite recovered from being forced to
outsource what were then known as blue-collar services in the
1980s.
Read the full article on the Guardian local government network
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Adult and child care heading for
trouble
13 April 2012
The government is getting into difficulties on both adult and
children's social care. In each case there are three problems:
funding, reform and ministerial rhetoric.
In adult care, the government is in denial about the
consequences of falling funding and rising demand. Care
services minister Paul Burstow appears capable of standing
next to a building billowing smoke and flames and saying there
is no fire.
In recent evidence to the health select committee, he claimed
the funding settlement plus savings from redesigning services
meant everything was fine. Any cuts were local authorities'
fault, apparently.
The Association of Directors of Adult Social Services has added
to the confusion by claiming that there is a funding gap of up to
£25bn. This was based on scaling up a study of need in
Birmingham to cover the entire country. Councils can't expect
ministers to play straight with the funding facts if their own
advocates make such extravagant claims on such thin
evidence.
Read the full article on the Guardian local government network
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Public Policy Media
Richard Vize