NHS England is a threat to the founding principles of our NHS

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Controversy over NHS England’s decision to award Oxford University Hospital’s and South East London’s scanning and pathology services to private companies means we need to cut through the rhetoric and get some clarity on what NHS England is really all about.

 

NHS England (NHSE) came from the Conservative Government’s strategy for the NHS captured the now infamous Health and Social Care Act passed in 2012 and implemented from April 2013. NHS England was established as a vehicle to ‘reform’ (read undermine) the health service further away from its founding vision as a publicly owned, provided and accountable system. NHSE’s recent track record in awarding significant contracts to private companies in Oxford and London demonstrates an onoing commitment to the Act, which for example allows Foundation Trusts to generate up to 49% of their income from private health sources.

NHS England conveniently proclaims adherence to all the positive values and connotations that the NHS stands for. But as an institution its primary role has been to carry out government policy, the ideology for which is to strengthen market processes, commercial contracts and competition amongst NHS service providers, opened far and wide to private interest.

NHS England manages the budget allocation to the 200+ Clinical Commissioning Groups (CCGs) and oversees  the budget planning, delivery and day-to-day operation of the commissioning side of the health service. Through NHS Improvement (they are merging) it regulates NHS provider trusts.

“No privatisation on my watch”

NHSE and Conservative Cabinet Ministers are clearly aligned when it comes to privatisation of the NHS. Health Secretary Matt Hancock for one has never made a secret of his enthusiasm for private companies, controversially promoting Babylon’s GP at Hand and proudly declaring himself a user of its service.

Government ministers with links to or an interest in private healthcare are numerous and while huge contracts are now frequently being awarded to non-NHS providers, it’s not hard to see that the conflict of interest is very real. David Oliver comments in the BMJ:

Employees, lobbyists, and consultants secure advisory or leadership roles in government bodies and then move back to the private sector. Meanwhile, senior government officials and former ministers take their inside knowledge and contacts to organisations and sectors that do regular business with government.

In this ‘post-truth’ era ministers publicly assert that the trend is not to privatise. Speaking in front of the Health and Social Care Committee in February, Hancock said:

I am going to be much more concrete. There is no privatisation of the NHS on my watch

Yet the amount of privatisation ‘on his watch’ has been staggering.

The Labour Party recently released data they obtained from the House of Commons Library showing 21 NHS contracts worth £127m are currently out to tender – and 19 of them have been put out since Hancock made the commitment.

 

Encouraging privatisation

Earlier this month NHS England threatened to sue Oxford University Hospitals for libel after staff there spoke out against the body’s decision to award their PET-CT cancer scanning service to private company InHealth. Clinicians said the process of removing their scanners and the staff trained to operate them would “undoubtedly cause clinical harm”

Lawyers for NHS England said the trust’s concerns (which were shared by doctors, MPs of all parties and cancer patients) amounted to defamation. The decision to remove the contract from the NHS will now be reviewed by the health secretary who could refer it to the Independent Review Panel (part of statutory appeal process).

There has been a partial U-turn in allowing OUH to retain the running of their own scanners, but the contract is still retained by InHealth and a new service will still be operated by private providers in Swindon and Milton Keynes. Pressure has been exerted from all sides, and Oxfordshire Keep Our NHS Public have played a part in the decision to partially reverse the decision. They say:

The proposed ‘partnership’ … is no such thing but [in reality] a proposed subcontract by InHealth to Oxford University Hospitals to deliver PET scan services, [and] appears to involve paying InHealth for doing precisely nothing on the Churchill site. This is totally corrupt. [In addition] the threats of legal action issued against clinicians if they voiced their fears for patients’ health should privatisation go ahead, were wrong. Legislation should be passed to outlaw such a practice.

Sadly, Oxford is not the only example of significant contracts being dished out to private providers. This is part of the push from NHS England and NHS Improvement to form national networks of specialist imaging. In South East London, Alliance Medical in private-public partnership with Kings, have taken on the specialist imaging contract. It is part of a larger, worrying trend, which campaigners must continue to monitor.

Also in South East London, three private providers have been shortlisted to deliver a contract for pathology services worth an eye-watering £2.25bn over 15 years, with no public consultation. Surely dealing with such a significant proportion of public money should warrant more transparency from NHS England, especially when the contract could extend to 20 years.

It reeks of a highly centralised, “we know best” top-down approach and seems to operate on the premise that the NHS is incapable of delivering services at scale. However, there is no evidence to support this and there is in fact evidence that private companies do not do it better.

 

Abolishing section 75

A public consultation is currently underway on several changes to the law regarding the NHS, including whether to revoke section 75 of the Health and Social Care Act 2012 (with its regulations) which allows for enforced competitive tendering of clinical services. This is a step we support as it would lessen the chances of numerous smaller contracts going to private providers. We are using this platform to highlight the impact of damaging legislation more generally. It is clearly nowhere near the extent of change that NHS campaigners and Keep Our NHS Public are seeking.

NHSE may be pulling away from the chaos of the contracting of thousands of smaller/medium contracts but they are pushing towards fewer very high-value large contracts for pathology/imaging and - coming soon - the integrated care provider contracts.

We must continue to campaign against these contracts, which break up the continuity of care in the NHS. 

You can write to NHS England (deadline 25 April) using the letter from We Own It: ‘Stop private companies suing the NHS’.

KONP Co-Chair Dr Tony O’Sullivan says:

There is no sensible reason why campaigners who fought to prevent this Act ever going through would not support the scrapping of one of the most damaging sections of it that has led to the carve-up of the NHS through multiple contracts and a competitive market. Often CCGs argue that they have no choice but to go to tender, if s75 is revoked, they will not be able to argue that. But we go beyond the demand to end Section 75 regulations and call for an end to contracting and privatisation altogether, an end to the Health and Social Care Act and the reinstatement of the NHS as a wholly public service. We need to changes laid down in the NHS Bill 2017-19.

 

What are we fighting for?

Addressing the Health Campaigns Together AGM earlier this month, Shadow Health Secretary Jon Ashworth said:

There can be no better example of social justice in action than a publicly provided NHS. ... The reason the Tories imposed austerity on the NHS at the same time as the Health and Social Care Act 2012 was that they wanted to sap confidence in the NHS and make people believe that they needed to go private - increasingly this is happening as waiting lists grow and also trusts are outsourcing due to a lack of capacity.

Keep Our NHS Public’s overall aim is to reverse this damage: to restore our NHS back to publicly run, owned and accountable universal health service. This means an end to the deliberate contracting of clinical services; an end to NHSE policy of fragmenting the NHS into separately managed discrete contracted areas; and a return to a nationally coordinated public service. We want a comprehensive NHS offering preventative public health programmes, well-funded and staffed primary and hospital services. We want a universal service for everyone in each geographical area - inclusive of migrants, undocumented and all vulnerable people whether registered with a GP lists or not.

NHSE was originally set up as the vehicle to drive government policies to extend the market into the public health system. Far from seeking to support the original aims of the NHS as a publicly owned and provided service, NHSE is now overtly in favour of privatisation on a large scale, further undermining the founding vision of the NHS.

NHS England’s latest move threatening to sue one of its own hospital trusts for voicing informed concerns - and openly taking the side of the private company - signals a renewed commitment to privatisation and will do nothing to assure the public that NHSE actually has the needs of our NHS and its patients at heart.

Samantha Wathen
Press Officer
Keep Our NHS Public

(This  article was amended 19/05/19)

Get involved with the NHSE consultation on Section 75. You can write to NHS England (deadline 25 April) using the letter from We Own It: ‘Stop private companies suing the NHS’.

 

Keep Our NHS Public is the longest running national and local membership campaign fighting to save our NHS. You can find out more about us here. By joining us you’ll become part of a community of health campaigners with unparalleled experience and passion, will belong to a nationwide network of activists and have the support of a core team of experienced organisers at a national level. It’s easy and doesn’t cost the earth. Join today.  

 

Join Keep Our NHS Public today!


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6 Comments

  1. A bit of a boo boo We own it on petition scrapping section 75 “Don’t sign thi petition it’s the worst thing you can do! NHSE’s CEO Simon Stevens ex President of UnitedHealth for Globalisation, USA wants the government to scrap Sec75 of the 2012 Health & Social Care Act because it acts as a legal regulator for procurement and acquisition of NHS contracts by the private sector! Without this legal element the door will blow wide open for United Health USA to bulldoze Branson’s Virgin, et al., aside and mop up everything! This is the planned final death nail for our NHS and the master stroke toward HMOs and the American insurance-based provision of healthcare! Wake up everybody and DON’T SIGN THIS PETITION!!!! . Hope to get a response from you.

    • Thank you, Jeanne Jackson, for signalling unintended consequences of scrapping Sec75 of 2012 H&SCAct. IMHO, Brexit is not only a ‘welcome mat’ for further takeovers/’partnerships-in-name-only’ by the private sector, but also a ‘useful distraction’ whilst current privatisation processes are ushered in. Brexit also shakes-up the political parties whilst outside forces manipulate the political agenda. We need an effective Labour Party NOW with a set of MPs that believe in effective socialism, effective economics, effective public services, effective progressive re-distribution of opportunity for ALL, effective levels of taxation, effective economic policies, effective foreign, defence & security policies, policies, effective negotiations with the EU to try to re-establish good working relationships with our most important economic and political partners and a joint vision for non-victimisation for party members and MPs, from all sections of the Labour Party who can credibly pledge & demonstrate allegiance to these principles. As a supporter of MPs who regard their job as an ultimate privilege (at the risk of party whip sanction) and a rare opportunity to use their public voice to promote altruism and common-sense with progressive politics. Electoral Reform, or at least some control of the funding and misdirection of political campaigns, would go some way to allay some of the excesses of current political discourse.

      • Thanks Nigel. See our post below to Jeanne.
        We have opposed Section 75 and regulations because of their INTENDED and REAL here and now consequences. They are putting at risk of privatisation 100s/1000s of clinical service contracts. Virgin holds over 400 alone. While you say we need an effective Labour Party now, we are not prepared to wait for a general election: this could be in June 2019 but it could be in May 2022! In the meanwhile, we will seek to protect our community services (the majority of contracts for which are going to private and non-NHS bodies), our clinical support services (opposing network contracts for pathology and specialist imaging like Oxford and SE London) and we will oppose the huge integrated care contracts, new IC providers and the highly centralised power grab NHSE is trying to pull off.

    • We don’t agree Jeanne, but thank you for your views.
      We are in a political battle and we are not passive on-lookers. The strength of campaigning by KONP, Health Campaigns Together and allies such as We Own It and Peoples Assembly has led to significant gains. We have toxified ‘accountable care organisations’ and forced the government and NHS England into changing the name. We supported the Judicial Review last year with Prof Stephen Hawking, Allyson Pollock and others which forced the government to abandon plans for ACOs from April last year, and forced a public consultation. We have forced government and NHSE to deny their privatisation plans (which of course continue) and to state that new structures will be NHS statutory bodies. These are not victories, but gains reflecting our strenght. The situation here and now is that there’s no chance whatsoever in this Parliament of more progressive legislation. I and KONP have been supporting the Campaign for the NHS Reinstatement Bill since June 2014 but a change of government is needed for that. The political question now is: in the context of our strong and ongoing campaigning for long-term comprehensive change – if offered the option of ending section 75 and its regulations tomorrow, thus ending compulsory tendering and protecting hundreds if not thousands of NHS services up and down the country, would we want that? Yes, in my view. And our strong campaigning against ACOs/ICOs/ICPs is, as we talk, continuing to oppose every move towards further privatisation by NHS England.

  2. Hi there..I would like to see more direct action..Die ins..more vocal demos..more shocking examples of what is happeining since 2012..The big one for me is the 8% gdp now 17% gdp when privatised argument..This disgusting lying Handcock and Mays cronies are literally getting away with murder..Please lets up the anti and give this gov the s**t it deserves..Take a lead from XR..it is efective..please please do more to save our NHS..Thanks..Harry Pritchard..

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