Public Policy Media
Richard Vize
LATEST
ARTICLES
Brexit starves public policy of its
oxygen
14 December 2018
It’s a funny way to take back control: vital areas of public policy
that directly affect our lives are being sacrificed to the
obsession with Brexit, and there seems little chance of respite.
While Brexit sucks up all the political oxygen, major areas of
public policy, including local government, health and social
care, are drifting.
Councils in England have finally had details of how much
money they will have for the next financial year, after the
financial settlement was postponed for the Brexit vote on 11
December that didn’t happen. But the local government
minister, Rishi Sunak, has said the outcome of the fair funding
review – the long-discussed overhaul of how local government
funding is distributed between authorities – will not be revealed
until “late spring” next year (late spring being one of those
elastic political seasons that can stretch out long enough to
encompass early Christmas shopping).
It is not that the delay is critical; it is the attitude of contempt
towards local government that angers councillors and officers.
The NHS long-term plan has been oscillating between
imminent publication and postponement until the new year. It’s
caught between Brexit and, as Denis Campbell revealed, a
bust-up between the NHS England chief executive, Simon
Stevens, and the government over his refusal to promise a leap
in performance in exchange for the £20.5bn of additional
funding announced over the summer.
Read the full article at Guardian Society
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Councils are used as austerity
punchbag
30 November 2018
The truth is finally out. Parliament has been told that ministers
have no vision for local government beyond carrying out basic
functions dictated by Whitehall.
Even while cutting real terms local government funding by
49%, the government usually at least pretends it sees some
wider role for councils in shaping the future of their places. But
evidence from Melanie Dawes, permanent secretary at the
Ministry for Housing, Communities and Local Government, to
the public accounts committee inquiry on local government
spending has laid bare the true position.
She told MPs: “We believe that the sector as a whole is
sustainable if the amount of resources available to it can
deliver the statutory services that it is required to deliver.”
When pressed she added: “We also have an eye on whether
there is some flexibility in the system for responding to events,
emergencies and so on, or indeed to be able to provide that
broader leadership of their area.”
The event – or possibly emergency – she highlighted was
Brexit.
Dawes’ revelation is critical for local government as it heads
towards next year’s spending review by the chancellor. It
prepares the ground for little or no real terms increase in
central funding.
Read the full article at Guardian Society
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Poverty and illness are ugly
bedfellows
16 November 2018
Deprivation is robbing people of years of good health from their
30s onwards, driving people out of work and reinforcing poverty
as they head towards retirement age. A huge new study by the
Health Foundation shows the impact, as poverty piles pressure
on NHS services.
More than 14 million people in England now have more than
one health condition: this detailed study of 300,000 people with
multiple health conditions reveals that people living in the least
deprived fifth of England have an average of two conditions
when they are aged 71, while those living in the most deprived
fifth reach the same point at 61.
Around 16% of people aged 65-74 in the least deprived group
have four or more conditions. For the most deprived group, that
figure leaps to 28%.
But living with multiple conditions is by no means restricted to
older people – significant gaps in health are already apparent
by the time people reach their late 30s.
As other studies have shown, deprivation and having multiple
conditions is strongly associated with frailty, with symptoms
such as weakness and weight loss. This is blighting the lives of
many younger people as well as older people.
Read the full article at Guardian Society
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There is a toxic culture among
NHS staff
2 November 2018
The most recent NHS staff survey revealed that more than
15% of those working in the health service have experienced
violence from patients, relatives or the public in the previous 12
months. It’s the highest figure for five years.
According to research by Unison and the Health Service
Journal, violence is particularly high in trusts struggling to meet
their performance targets or with large debts. Attacks include
being stabbed with needles, biting, spitting and sexual assault.
Research in the US illustrates the many ways in which staff
can be attacked. While intoxication or confusion are obvious
problems, health professionals are also particularly at risk while
trying to put in tubes or intravenous lines, or while trying to give
injections or take blood.
Violent incidents may also occur when patients are being
moved, such as from a chair to an examination table, while
another common problem is patients attacking staff because
they want to leave while being treated.
Attacks like these don’t just impact on staff themselves: there
are indications that health workers who feel fearful or defensive
provide lower quality care.
Read the full article at Guardian Society
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UK babies are dying because of
the cuts
19 October 2018
The increase in UK infant mortality over the past two years,
after more than a century of decline, is the starkest indicator of
how we are failing to support the physical and mental wellbeing
of children and young people.
The frightening implications for individual families and the long-
term pressures on the public sector have been spelt out by the
Royal College of Paediatrics and Child Health, which on
Monday published its projections of likely outcomes for child
health up to 2030. The study compares the UK with the EU15+,
comprising 15 long-standing EU members plus Australia,
Canada and Norway. It shows that by 2030 the UK infant
mortality rate will be 80% higher than the EU15+, even if the
country resumes its previous downward path. If we carry on as
we are, the rate will be 140% higher. As always, the impact is
greatest among the poorest.
To put this into context, United Nations’ estimates of infant
mortality indicate that only about six other countries have had
increases over the past two or three years. We are keeping
company with Dominica, Grenada and Venezuela.
Read the full article at Guardian Society
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Whistleblowers still hit by closed
culture
5 October 2018
As whistleblower Dr Chris Day finally gets his case fully heard,
it is clear the health service and the rest of the public sector is
still far from establishing the open culture that has repeatedly
been promised.
Day is the latest in a long line of NHS staff forced to fight in an
employment tribunal after making what he asserts was a
“protected disclosure”.
It is true there has been progress. Following the 2015 review of
health service whistleblowing by Robert Francis QC, there is
now a network of “freedom to speak up guardians” across NHS
trusts, supported by a national guardian for the health service,
a post energetically filled by Dr Henrietta Hughes.
Her first report, published in September, reveals that more than
7,000 cases were raised with freedom to speak up guardians
over the previous year. A third involved patient safety and
service quality, and 361 people alleged they had suffered at the
hands of their employer as a result of raising concerns.
That thousands of people feel able to approach the guardians –
albeit a fifth of them anonymously – is promising, and Hughes
pushing for action at the trusts that failed to record any cases is
a good sign.
Read the full article at Guardian Society
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Public sector staff are being
pummelled
1 October 2018
Despite some cautious indications that the worst of the public
sector job cuts may be over, local government is still being
hammered, pay is still being suppressed and the future for
many workers is still precarious.
After eight years of being beaten down by austerity, the once-
unacceptable has now been normalised. The relentless attrition
upon adults’ and children’s services, including the loss of
70,000 local authority adult care jobs since 2009, has become
framed as merely the annual round of difficult decisions, rather
than the withdrawal of essential services for the most
vulnerable. Even the shocking realisation that austerity is
shortening lives has caused barely a ripple.
Sharp rises in gun and knife crime have accompanied a huge
decline in police numbers. Having bottomed out in December
2016, police staffing staged a brief recovery before slipping
back.
While the NHS has certainly avoided the worst of austerity, a
failure over many years to plan for its workforce requirements
has left roughly one in 10 medical and nursing posts unfilled.
These vacancies mean that patient safety is being
compromised every day in virtually every hospital. Operations
are being cancelled.
Read the full article at Guardian Society
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