NHS England: divorced, beheaded, died

  • Thread starter Thread starter Abbasi K.
  • Start date Start date

View the thread, titled "NHS England: divorced, beheaded, died" which is posted in News about the NHS on NHSForums.com

NHS England: divorced, beheaded, died
thebmj-logo-print.jpg

A butterfly flaps its wings in the Amazon, said the mathematician and meteorologist Edward Lorenz, and later a tornado rages thousands of miles away.1 By contrast, will the demise of NHS England, the behemoth “quango” that oversees the NHS, raise more than a flutter on the “front line” of clinical care? It’s hard to argue that NHS England was ever wanted or loved or that it delivered to expectations, but in a world at war on bureaucracy, of vanishing fiscal space and a need to grow defence budgets, every billion counts. However, redirecting funding to the so called front line is one of the official narratives for disbanding NHS England (doi:10.1136/bmj.r521).2 Cutting several thousand of the staff who run the overlapping bureaucracies of NHS England and the Department of Health and Social Care will save less than £1bn—a big number that nonetheless accounts for a tiny percentage of the NHS’s £192bn budget for the next financial year (doi:10.1136/bmj.r535).34 Whether the few hundreds of millions that might be subsequently released can have a direct impact on clinical care is hard to believe, but whether the opportunities outweigh the risks more broadly requires consideration. Andrew Lansley’s reforms of 2012 gave birth to the NHS Commissioning Board, which became NHS England, an arm’s length body in theory divorced from politics that would run the NHS. Malcolm Grant, chair of the commissioning board …

Continue reading this article about NHS England: divorced, beheaded, died

by Abbasi K.

NHS Forums - For daily discussion by NHS Staff.
 

Reply to the thread, titled "NHS England: divorced, beheaded, died" which is posted in News about the NHS on NHSForums.com

News About the NHS

Three local NHS CEOs join NHS England as directors

NHS privatisation and PFI - what Lord Darzi’s review missed

NHS restricting access to obesity services across England, BMJ finds

NHS restricting access to obesity services across England, BMJ finds

<p>Budget cuts to local services fell disproportionately on care for obese patients, leading to ‘postcode lottery’</p><p>The NHS is restricting access to obesity services across England, leading to patients in nearly half the country being unable to book appointments with specialist teams for support and treatments such as weight-loss jabs.</p><p>An investigation by the British Medical Journal found budget cuts to local services fell disproportionately on obesity care, with patients living with the condition often deemed less worthy of care than others.</p> <a href="NHS restricting access to obesity services across England, BMJ finds">Continue reading...</a>

Budget cuts to local services fell disproportionately on care for obese patients, leading to ‘postcode lottery’

The NHS is restricting access to obesity services across England, leading to patients in nearly half the country being unable to book appointments with specialist teams for support and treatments such as weight-loss jabs.

An investigation by the British Medical Journal found budget cuts to local services fell disproportionately on obesity care, with patients living with the condition often deemed less worthy of care than others.

Continue reading...

By Ian Sample Science editor

Continue reading...
Back
Top