According to Deputy Prime Minister Nick Clegg the NHS reforms that have been chalked out must go ahead, despite fresh criticism from MPs. The Commons health select committee is expected to say that plans to scrap primary care trusts and other changes are hampering efforts to save billions.
Mr. Clegg said ministers had gone “a long way” to address concerns, and that the NHS could not be “frozen in time”. Plans to restructure the NHS in England and devolve more power to GPs, included in the Health and Social Care Bill, are going through Parliament. But Labour said the “reckless re-organisation” must be halted. Additionally despite a host of concessions by ministers, professional bodies representing GPs, nurses and midwives, as well as health service unions, are calling for the whole plan to be abandoned.
Mike Farrar, chief executive of the NHS Confederation, an independent group which represents those who work in the NHS, he was deeply concerned about the financial pressures on the NHS and the impact it would have on patients. “The full implications of this remain poorly understood outside the NHS, partly because politicians are reluctant to stand up and explain them,” he said in a statement. “If we are to keep the NHS sustainable in the long term, we need to be honest that this will mean fundamentally reorganizing the way we deliver care in the best interest of patients. Some local hospital services will need to close or move into larger specialist centers. We also desperately need to strengthen care provided in the community.”
The committee has also raised concerns, concluding that the plans are making it more difficult to achieve the target of £20bn efficiency savings by 2014-15. The report from the committee due to be published next week reads, “The reorganization process continues to complicate the push for efficiency gains…Although it may have facilitated savings in some cases, we heard that it more often creates disruption and distraction that hinders the ability of organizations to consider truly effective ways of reforming service delivery and releasing savings.” The committee is made up of MPs from all parties and chaired by ex-Conservative health secretary Stephen Dorrell.
Mr Clegg told the BBC he would consider the report and there was a “legitimate question” about how the structural changes would “interact” with efforts to make the NHS more efficient and productive. But he said the NHS could not stand still at a time when it was having to deal with an ageing population and a rapidly rising cost of medical treatments. :We have gone a long way to allay the concerns about the original blueprint of these reforms,” he said.
Health minister Simon Burns said reform was essential to create efficiency savings and ensure the NHS was sustainable. “Our modernization plan will put more power in the hands of doctors and nurses which means we are able to slash bureaucracy, saving £4.5bn that will be reinvested in better NHS services for patients,” he said.
Shadow health secretary Andy Burnham said the plans were badly thought out and wrongly timed. “The NHS right now is facing the biggest financial challenge in its history, so to reorganize now is the worst possible thing, because it needs stability to face that financial challenge. But what in particular am I opposing? In the end this bill is a privatization plan for the NHS and that is why there is such huge disquiet about the bill.” “I think if these changes go ahead it will be the end of the National Health Service as we know it. It will be a plan to put market forces at the very heart of our health services,” said Mr. Burnham.