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  Addenbrooke’s shows flaws 
  among  elite
  25 September 2015
  The Care Quality Commission’s decision to classify the 
  renowned Cambridge University hospitals foundation trust, 
  which runs Addenbrooke’s hospital, as inadequate is only the 
  latest example of specialist hospitals running into serious 
  problems with their district general hospital (DGH) services.
  Imperial College healthcare NHS trust was designated 
  “requires improvement” last December, with concerns over 
  cleanliness, weaknesses in the safety culture and “markedly 
  varied” leadership in its hospitals. The famous John Radcliffe 
  hospital, part of Oxford University hospitals NHS trust, was 
  similarly judged “requires improvement” in May 2014 in light of 
  a failure to learn from “never” events and problems in surgery, 
  while senior doctors were said to be alienated from the board. 
  In January 2014 the CQC issued University College London 
  hospitals foundation trust with four compliance notices over the 
  risk of unsafe surgery, serious problems in A&E and poor 
  record-keeping on its wards.
  Read the full article on the Guardian Healthcare Network
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  Hunt sounds death knell for 
  foundations
  11 September 2015
  There is a growing sense of urgency – if not yet panic – at the 
  Department of Health about the pace of reform in the NHS.
  With overwhelming evidence (pdf) that virtually nobody in the 
  health service believes the target of £22bn of efficiency savings 
  has any chance of being achieved, and an underlying 
  accumulated deficit among providers close to £2bn, the health 
  secretary, Jeremy Hunt, is trying to hit the accelerator.
  He told the Health Service Journal bluntly that there are “too 
  many trusts as independent organisations”, and is driving 
  providers towards the model proposed by Salford Royal 
  foundation trust chief executive Sir David Dalton of the biggest 
  and best providers having chains and franchises of 
  organisations and services.
  There are some brave assumptions here – that senior 
  managers who are good at leading one organisation will be 
  good at leading several, which doesn’t follow, and that there 
  will be sufficient capacity and support to deliver robust 
  improvements in clinical quality without destabilising services in 
  the host organisation, which is far from certain. But despite the 
  difficulties, it is vital that fast, scalable ways to spread 
  excellence are developed.
  Read the full article on the Guardian Healthcare Network
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  Corbyn is right: PFI was a costly 
  mistake
  28 August 2015
  There can’t be many issues that unite Jeremy Corbyn and 
  Andrew – now Lord – Lansley, but the impact of the private 
  finance initiative on the NHS is one of them.
  Corbyn has called for a fund to be established to bailout NHS 
  trusts saddled with PFI schemes. In 2012 Lansley gave seven 
  NHS trusts whose PFI deals were unaffordable access to a 
  £1.5bn fund. All the deals had been negotiated under the 
  Labour government.
  Last year an inquiry by the public accounts committee into the 
  financial stability of NHS organisations laid bare the huge 
  burden that PFI deals for building and operating NHS facilities 
  is imposing. Almost a third of providers have a PFI scheme, 
  costing the NHS a total of £1.8bn year. Trusts with the highest 
  charges were most likely to have poor financial results – in 
  2013-14 four of the six trusts with deficits of more than £25m 
  had a PFI scheme.
  Read the full article on the Guardian Healthcare Network
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  Will some patients have to pay 
  for care?
  14 August 2015
  With NHS providers on track to run up deficits in the region of 
  £2bn this year, the spectre of patients paying for more services 
  again looms over the NHS.
  Last year’s combined deficit of £822m across the provider 
  sector hid an even more serious truth: add in the extra £250m 
  from the Treasury and another £650m transferred from capital 
  budgets and the underlying deficit was nearer £1.7bn.
  With little prospect of finding the required £22bn of efficiencies, 
  and the Health Foundation and King’s Fund pressing for even 
  more money on top of the additional £8bn already promised by 
  the chancellor, George Osborne, one way or another we are 
  going to have to find other ways to pay.
  We can thank the Germans for all but killing off one idea that 
  used to be touted – paying to see your GP. In 2004 Germany 
  introduced a €10 quarterly payment but the Bundestag 
  unanimously scrapped it eight years later. Predictably, the cost 
  of administration almost outweighed the money collected, and 
  there is some evidence that it deterred people on low incomes 
  from seeing their doctor. The strongest argument against 
  charging to see a GP here is that it would destroy the best thing 
  about the NHS – that it is free at the point of need. But there 
  are other ways the edges of that principle could be blurred.
  Read the full article on the Guardian Healthcare Network
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  Lords defeat reveals devolution’s 
  limit
  31 July 2015
  A little reported Lords defeat for the government over its plans 
  to devolve powers to major cities has major implications for 
  local control of the NHS.
  Last week an amendment was moved successfully by Labour 
  peer Norman Warner to the cities and local government 
  devolution bill which stops the transfer of NHS regulatory 
  functions held by national bodies. Crucially, if the amendment is 
  not reversed in the Commons, it will ensure any devolved 
  services adhere to national service standards and are still 
  nationally accountable.
  The bill, part of the “northern powerhouse” drive to devolve 
  responsibilities to major cities, has become the vehicle for 
  devolving £6bn of health and care spending to Greater 
  Manchester.
  The amendment underscores Labour suspicions that the 
  Conservatives want to whittle away the health secretary’s 
  ultimate responsibility for providing a national health service. 
  This caused a row during the passage of Andrew Lansley’s 
  NHS reforms during the last parliament, when the government 
  had to accept an amendment spelling out the requirement for 
  the health secretary to remain accountable no matter how 
  much control was passed to NHS England.
  Read the full article on the Guardian Healthcare Network
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  Hunt’s NHS vision is already in 
  difficulty
  17 July 2015
  Jeremy Hunt’s “25-year vision” for the NHS, unveiled this week, 
  is an amalgam of rapid change, inspiring transatlantic 
  collaboration, another round of institutional demolition, a 
  gimmick and a plan for the release of dodgy patient safety 
  data.
  The ultimatum to the BMA over seven-day working – forcing 
  through new seven-day contracts – reflects frustration at the 
  excruciatingly slow progress towards achieving this key patient 
  safety goal. Getting it in place has been dogged by questioning 
  of the mortality data, demands for more money and arguments 
  over the out of hours availability of support services. While all 
  these have their merits, they do not amount to a justification for 
  endless prevarication. It is a tough deal for doctors, but it will 
  drive through a crucial and long overdue cultural change. 
  But forcing through the gradual adoption of new contracts does 
  not mean it can be done for free. The contracts will not be 
  enough to deliver the change in hospitals sliding into deficit. It 
  is possible that some trusts will find efficiencies from seven-day 
  working but most will need sizeable up-front investment.
  Read the full article on the Guardian Healthcare Network
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  What Hunt can learn from 
  predecessors
  2 July 2015
  What do you learn from taking on the toughest job in 
  government, secretary of state for health? At the Institute for 
  Government three former secretaries – Conservative Stephen 
  Dorrell and Labour’s Alan Milburn and Patricia Hewitt – shared 
  their wisdom alongside incumbent Jeremy Hunt, who was 
  apparently keen to learn from the wise words of his 
  predecessors.
  Co-hosted by the Health Foundation, it followed the publication 
  of Glaziers and Window Breakers, interviews with 10 former 
  secretaries of state, which was the first document Hunt found 
  on his desk on returning to the Department of Health’s 
  Richmond House headquarters after the election.
  The fact that even the passing of decades has not diminished 
  their fascination with the role says a great deal about the hold 
  the post has over those who occupy it.
  As Dorrell pointed out, there is nothing new that health 
  secretaries have to deal with – a unique mix of policy and 
  management. While the plan to devolve healthcare powers to 
  Greater Manchester is portrayed as an innovation, 70 years 
  ago Nye Bevan and Herbert Morrison were debating within the 
  cabinet of Clement Attlee the tensions between local and 
  national control of healthcare.
  Read the full article on the Guardian Healthcare Network
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  Public Policy Media 
  Richard Vize