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Nurses 'no confidence' in Lansley 
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Health Secretary Andrew Lansley has been given a vote of no confidence by nurses.

Delegates at the Royal College of Nursing conference overwhelmingly backed a motion questioning his handling of the NHS reforms in England.


http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/health-13063285

My (orange, and speaker-insulting) MP is involved in this train wreck. His reply to my message a week or so ago was not promising.

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Wed Apr 13, 2011 10:59 am
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TBH most doctors have no confidence in Lansley either!

As usual, they're ignoring the advice of the health profession, steam rolling ahead and will manage to put the blame on GPs when it all goes t*ts up.

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Wed Apr 13, 2011 8:45 pm
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cloaked_wolf wrote:
TBH most doctors have no confidence in Lansley either!

As usual, they're ignoring the advice of the health profession, steam rolling ahead and will manage to put the blame on GPs when it all goes t*ts up.

This will eventually destroy the NHS as the private contractors will cherry pick the bulk of the easy profitable proceedures leaving the NHS hospitals with only the expensive emergency work and little in the way of training doctors because basic proceedures will be done privately and there will be no way for a NHS doctor to gain experience within the NHS. Longer term it will cause serious problems with consultancy work as well.

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Wed Apr 13, 2011 9:07 pm
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Completely agree and this is the view with most doctors - things aren't going to improve for the best, they'll be for the worse.

I think it's in Iceland, where although there are medical schools, there is no postgraduate training. So everyone goes to medical school, then has to go outside Iceland to try to find a training job, become specialists/GPs etc and then go back to work. This is what will end up happening and in the meantime, you'll continue to get brain-drain (ie poaching doctors from other countries) to fill in the stop-gap whilst awaiting for the first set of qualified doctors to come back.

This is why I've always been anti-Tory - because they're anti-NHS, anti-doctors and want privitisation. Your access to healthcare will be based on your ability to pay, just like with the other privitised industries. It's a good time to retire from medicine, and for those young enough, they can go into other courses, but it's a bad time for people like me who are in training and may or may not have a job for life at the end of it.

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Wed Apr 13, 2011 9:49 pm
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It is the same crass argument that is used to pile on tuition fees. I do not care about the extra taxes to give graduates free education because all it does is mean that there are plenty of doctors or lawyers or what ever available should I need them. Also without incurring huge debts they will not need such huge salaries to cover those student debts. That will mean that I do benefit should I ever go into hospital. This coalition are destroying the country with their neo-conservative/liberal agenda.

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Wed Apr 13, 2011 11:45 pm
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Amnesia10 wrote:
It is the same crass argument that is used to pile on tuition fees. I do not care about the extra taxes to give graduates free education because all it does is mean that there are plenty of doctors or lawyers or what ever available should I need them. Also without incurring huge debts they will not need such huge salaries to cover those student debts. That will mean that I do benefit should I ever go into hospital. This coalition are destroying the country with their neo-conservative/liberal agenda.


What would Labour have done? Thrown more money at it? They've done that for the past x years without the service improving. They've featherbedded the service so that there are layers of management who are accountable to no-one while those on the front line have to make do with what the bead-counters give them. The NHS should be led by the people at the sharp end, with the rest there to support them and provide what they need to do the job. After all, it's not a business, and while I'm not overawed by the current lot, at least they do appear to listen (sometimes).

I've just looked at the report from my local NHS Trust, and salaries and wages make up over 70% of the operating expenses, but they don't show how much is for front-line staff and how much is for management.

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Thu Apr 14, 2011 7:17 am
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Here is my MP’s reply to an email I sent via 38degrees.com about this. It’s a standard fare reply, I think, and doesn’t address my concerns about private companies cherry picking services based on profitability, or the fact that private companies run for the benefit of the shareholders, not the customers (or in this case, the patients).

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Simon Burns, MP wrote:
Thank you for your email of today's date drawing to my attention your concerns about the modernisation of the NHS.

I am afraid it is just factually incorrect to suggest the plans will privatise the Health Service. The principle at free of the point of use for all eligible to use the Health Service will continue to be enshrined in legislation. Competition will be promoted in the NHS but based on quality not on price, and I think that is a good thing to enhance the quality of care for patients.

While I accept that any review that improves the contents of the Bill are to be welcomed, I certainly do not think that the proposed modernisation of the NHS is dangerous because it is designed to improve the provision of healthcare for our citizens by enhancing the quality of care, improving outcomes of patient treatment and saving money by reducing excessive management and bureaucracy, and improving efficiency so that every penny saved can be reinvested in patient care.


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Simon Burns is a Health Minister, so his job is to talk this up as much as he can. I don’t trust him, or any of the Conservatives, on this at all. They love to privatise, and their agenda is to dismantle the NHS and give us the American system of health care.

cloakedwolf wrote:
TBH most doctors have no confidence in Lansley either!


Thing is, the government keeps on saying that a large number of GPs have signed up for this, implying that they are in agreement with it. This seems at odds with your observations, and indeed other prominent doctors. I’d like to know where these figures come from, and how they are able to be so freely massaged like this.

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Thu Apr 14, 2011 8:53 am
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paulzolo wrote:
Thing is, the government keeps on saying that a large number of GPs have signed up for this, implying that they are in agreement with it. This seems at odds with your observations, and indeed other prominent doctors. I’d like to know where these figures come from, and how they are able to be so freely massaged like this.

I believe the story is they take GPs who sign up as a 'representative sample' of the entire group of GPS who are available to sign up within a given health trust. So, say, there are 100 GPs in a health trust's area of administration and 8 of them sign up as wanting to take part in the scheme. According to the government's method, that means the health trust has signed up and therefore all 100 GPs can be considered 'in favour of the scheme'. So when they say '80% of GPS are in favour' what they actually mean is 'some indeterminate number of GPs in the health trusts that control 80% of GP's work have expressed a preference'.

This is obviously incredibly dodgy in all sorts of ways and anyone with two brain cells to rub together would tell you it's a completely spurious conclusion to come to. Although still not entirely definitive, the canvasing done by the GMC seems much more actually representative and can be neatly summarised as 'piss off'.

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Thu Apr 14, 2011 10:40 am
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jonbwfc wrote:
This is obviously incredibly dodgy in all sorts of ways and anyone with two brain cells to rub together would tell you it's a completely spurious conclusion to come to. Although still not entirely definitive, the canvasing done by the GMC seems much more actually representative and can be neatly summarised as 'piss off'.


QuestionTime covered this issue last week.

http://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b010bbd2#p00g6nsw - Question 2

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Thu Apr 14, 2011 10:58 am
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How can tell when a coalition spokesman is lying? Their lips move. :twisted:

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Thu Apr 14, 2011 1:35 pm
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Amnesia10 wrote:
How can tell when a politician is lying? Their lips move. :twisted:

changed to reflect reality.

Bact to the OP when have the GMC or any of the medical colleges/unions ever welcomed reform. Didnt the GMC campaign against the setting up of the NHS?

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Thu Apr 14, 2011 1:59 pm
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bobbdobbs wrote:
Didnt the GMC campaign against the setting up of the NHS?

Yes they did.

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Thu Apr 14, 2011 3:39 pm
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The GMC operate independently of doctors, despite us having to pay them.
The BMA is about as much use as a chocolate fireguard and most doctors aren't members.

Politicians have neutered the power of consultants so they are subservient to managers so they don't want to stick up.

Divide and conquer. The British way to destroy everything. Including the NHS!

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Thu Apr 14, 2011 6:11 pm
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reading between the lines on this i have come to the conclusion that when any Govt. try and cut management and bureaucracy within the NHS
the management and bureaucracy start shouting about cuts to frontline services

its the management and bureaucracy that then go and cut frontline services to safeguard their own jobs

the Govt. should just make sure 40% of management and 25% of the bureaucracy is compulsory cut over the next 4 years
this can be achieved by immediately sacking any management that cut any frontline services ...

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Thu Apr 14, 2011 8:21 pm
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One of the problems is that central government created so many targets and efficiency targets that they needed to create thousands of bureaucrats to get those figures. The government demands to be more business like have not stopped.

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Thu Apr 14, 2011 11:06 pm
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