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  Northern cities must lead HS2 
  debate
  27 September 2013
  The HS2 lobby should get the cities and towns that would 
  benefit most from it to lead the campaign to get it built.
  Depending on the route, the beneficiaries include Birmingham, 
  Manchester, Sheffield, Derby and Leeds.
  Sir David Higgins, the newly appointed chairman of the HS2 
  rail link, said yesterday that it is essential the £50bn scheme 
  has cross-party backing.
  His remarks followed shadow chancellor Ed Balls' intimation 
  that Labour might withdraw support if the costs climb.
  By threatening to withdraw Labour consent, Balls sees an 
  opportunity to tout Labour's message that it can be trusted with 
  taxpayers' money while kyboshing one of Chancellor George 
  Osborne's flagship projects.
  The uncertainty is fuelled by the extraordinarily long and 
  complex procedure for getting the route agreed, punctuated by 
  court and parliamentary battles.
  Read the full article on the Guardian local government network
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  Primary care crisis is driving 
  change
  20 September 2013
  Primary care is about to be seized by a degree of turbulence 
  and change that will make the acute sector look ordered and 
  calm.
  The pressures for change are coming from every direction: the 
  short-term crisis in A&E, the long-term need to move care out 
  of hospitals, the need to improve access to GPs while reducing 
  their workload, the tightening economics of general practice 
  and the need to improve clinical quality.
  Looming over all this is the determination of Jeremy Hunt, the 
  health secretary, to claim the government has "sorted out 
  primary care". His speech to the King's Fund last week made 
  plain his game: having decided that the Labour's 2004 GP 
  contract is the source of problems ranging from poor care of 
  older people to A&E pressures, he is going to rewrite it by next 
  April, sweeping away bureaucracy and securing a "dramatic 
  simplification" of targets and incentives.
  Read the full article on the Guardian healthcare network
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  Labour is stuck in policy black 
  hole
  13 September 2013
  Labour Leader Ed Miliband has talked in broad terms about the 
  need for a Labour government to "get on with devolving power 
  away from Westminster to English local authorities and the 
  people, without the need for mayoral referendums or such-like".
  However, as in other policy areas – where we had had to put 
  up with the usual platitudes trotted out by opposition parties – 
  we still don't know the party would actually do.
  Intriguingly, Miliband opens up the prospect of Labour 
  introducing mayors without local consultation, but beyond that 
  morsel we don't know what he means by devolution.
  Read the full article on the Guardian local government network
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  Playing politics with the top NHS 
  job 
  3 September 2013
  Applications for the post of NHS England chief executive close 
  this week. The winning candidate will be made or broken by 
  their ability to negotiate the politics of health policy.
  While choosing the successor to Sir David Nicholson is 
  nominally in the hands of NHS England chair Sir Malcolm 
  Grant, in reality he will be sidelined from the process. Health 
  secretary Jeremy Hunt will be in control, and Downing Street 
  will be all over it. In terms of the Conservatives' electoral 
  chances, this appointment is as important as the governor of 
  the Bank of England.
  Like the Bank of England position, this is a role with an 
  international profile, which will be filled after an international 
  search. But the central role of politics in the job is a 
  complicating factor when looking for candidates overseas.
  Read the full article on the Guardian healthcare network
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  Councils risk hypocrisy on NHS 
  cuts
  30 August 2013
  Councils are becoming increasingly aggressive in their 
  opposition to hospital trust moves, such as changing an 
  accident and emergency unit into a more modest urgent care 
  centre.
  In the high court, Lewisham council won a major victory, 
  blocking changes to their local hospital that were part of a plan 
  to save the imploding South London Healthcare Trust.
  In west London, Ealing is objecting to changes to A&E 
  services, while down the M4 Windsor and Maidenhead is 
  fighting a plan to move a minor injuries unit to Bracknell and 
  close a birth unit. Trafford council has voted unanimously to 
  fight the closure of the A&E unit at Trafford general hospital, 
  which at peak times see seven patients an hour according to 
  the Department of Health, and expand services nearby.
  Read the full article on the Guardian local government network
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  GPs must give telehealth a 
  chance
  27 August 2013
  The greatest benefits from telehealth are yet to come – as a 
  catalyst for service integration and patient empowerment. But 
  these will only be realised if doctors stop looking for 
  opportunities to reject it.
  The development of telehealth has been dogged by 
  politicisation of the issue and the way the conclusions of the 
  "whole system demonstrator" programme were interpreted and 
  debated.
  Health secretary Jeremy Hunt is firmly committed to telehealth. 
  The day after the publication last November of the first NHS 
  Mandate, identifying its priorities for the coming years, he 
  confirmed that seven pathfinders run by the NHS and councils 
  would be signing contracts to provide access to telehealth for 
  100,000 people this year.
  Read the full article on the Guardian healthcare network
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  Building a dementia friendly 
  world
  8 August 2013
  The idea of dementia-friendly communities brilliantly 
  encapsulates what a progressive care system could deliver, 
  both for those who need support and for the taxpayer.
  The concept is simple: to improve the quality of life for people 
  with dementia and help them to become active members of the 
  community. Making it happen involves bringing together every 
  part of a community – health services, social care, transport, 
  local businesses, charities and voluntary groups, the police, the 
  fire brigade and local people.
  Clinical commissioning groups (CCGs) are at the heart of the 
  dementia-friendly drive, and their approach demonstrates how 
  healthcare can and should extend well beyond the borders of 
  the NHS.
  Read the full article on the Guardian healthcare network
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  Civil service has a great deal to 
  learn
  2 August 2013
  The cabinet office behavioural insights team – the "nudge unit" 
  – has set up a training programme called Policy School. 
  Responding to criticism that much civil service training is 
  lecture-based, fast-track civil servants are given four days to 
  design a policy that requires little investment, saves money and 
  improves services.
  One of the first groups through the system was asked to design 
  a programme to improve the health and lives of older people in 
  a London borough. The results were less than impressive.
  This well-meaning stab at improving the policy-making quality 
  of civil servants highlights the serious flaws that endure in the 
  training and development of senior public servants.
  Despite many years of sporadic effort to open up civil service 
  recruitment, it still fails in the essential test of learning from the 
  outside talent it attracts.
  Read the full article on the Guardian local government network
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  Confusion reigns over urgent 
  care
  25 July 2013
  Who is in charge? Hidden among the predictable dissection of 
  urgent and emergency care woes in the health select 
  committee report, published on Wednesday, are serious 
  concerns about whether the myriad of new NHS bodies are 
  capable of sorting the problems out.
  Few people would look at the new NHS structure – which bears 
  more than a passing resemblance to the piping diagram for a 
  gas works – and conclude that what the NHS needs is yet 
  more organisations. But that was indeed what NHS England 
  decided when faced with growing problems in A&E.
  Ignoring the primacy of clinical commissioning groups, it 
  imposed urgent care boards across the country, under the 
  auspices of its local area teams, charged with rapidly producing 
  plans to sort out A&E. But it then seemed to lose its nerve. 
  Read the full article on the Guardian healthcare network
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  Gove’s flawed solution for 
  Doncaster
  19 July 2013
  The education secretary's decision to strip Doncaster council of 
  its children's services is a turning point in relations between 
  central and local government in the leadership of child 
  protection.
  On Tuesday, Michael Gove ordered that all the council's 
  children's services apart from education be run by an 
  independent trust for at least five years.
  This means that, from next April, the secretary of state will be 
  responsible for the safety of Doncaster children.
  The decision follows the recommendations of a government 
  commissioned review led by professor Julian Le Grand. It is, as 
  the report acknowledges, a major development in children's 
  services.
  Read the full article on the Guardian local government network
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  When will Hunt fall through the 
  ice?
  11 July 2013
  So far, Jeremy Hunt has been skating over the NHS ice with 
  the practised ease of an impressive communicator. When will 
  he fall through?
  In the wake of the Francis inquiry, the health secretary has 
  shrewdly positioned himself as the patients' champion against 
  the vested interests of the healthcare system. He moves 
  quickly to condemn failure, even if, as in the case of the Care 
  Quality Commission's recent convulsions over the Morecambe 
  Bay maternity failures, he is not in possession of all the facts.
  (The unravelling of the Grant Thornton report into the CQC's 
  supposed cover-up means there is now the prospect of an 
  investigation into the investigation into the investigation into the 
  investigation.
  Read the full article on the Guardian healthcare network
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  Cockell takes the fight to 
  ministers
  5 July 2013
  Calibrating a Cockell is a delicate science. Cockells are not 
  instruments given to wild swings between boundless joy and 
  rage, but nuanced fluctuations between cautious optimism and 
  irritation. And on Tuesday it was clear Local Government 
  Association leader Sir Merrick Cockell, opening its annual 
  conference in Manchester, was very irritated.
  The result? The best speech he has given as LGA leader. In 
  measured but firm, often edgy tones he took the fight to both 
  the government and the opposition. He threw at them not 
  demands for more money or a wishlist for a localist Utopia but 
  hard-edged, practical policies to allow councils to help local 
  businesses grow and to redesign public services for a future 
  short of cash but enriched by technological and community 
  resources.
  Read the full article on the Guardian local government network
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  Meet the new public health 
  masters
  4 July 2013
  How is public health run now?
  Under the Health and Social Care Act 2012 most public health 
  functions carried out by primary care trusts moved to 152 local 
  authorities—unitary, metropolitan, and county councils and 
  London boroughs. These authorities are responsible for 
  promoting population health and reducing inequalities. Councils 
  now run a diverse range of programmes such as smoking 
  cessation, drug and alcohol services, obesity prevention, and 
  prevention and treatment of violence.
  The 2012 act created an executive agency, Public Health 
  England, which is part of the Department of Health rather than 
  NHS England. Its responsibilities include health protection, 
  providing information and data, and developing the workforce.
  Read the full article at the British Medical Journal
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  Public Policy Media 
  Richard Vize