
Health Spokesman: Simon Hughes

- Chair of the Save Guys Campaign.
ARE LABOUR REALLY COMMITTED TO THE PUBLIC
HEALTH SERVICE THE PUBLIC WANT?.
Commenting on the publication of the White Paper on
the Future of the NHS, Simon Hughes MP, the Liberal Democrat Health Spokesman, said:
A serious White Paper looking at the future
of the NHS is welcome as will be more money spent on patient care, but claims that £1
billion will be saved over 5 years by cutting the bureaucracy would be more credible if
the Government had these matters independently audited and verified by non-politicians,
not subject to heavy spin by the Government of the day.
The big questions for the public who are the
NHS patients of the present and the future are not how will the heath service be run but
what will the health service do and how much money will it have to do it?
The National Institute for Clinical
Excellence is welcome as far it goes but the Government must come clean. Will it not still
be the case that, under the Government plans for this parliament, rationing will continue
by waiting lists and by postcode.
Where is the proof that replacing one system
of purchasing by doctors and health authorities by another system of purchasing by doctors
will either be more cost effective or more co-ordinated let alone more accountable.
Wouldnt a merger of health authorities and social service departments under
democratic control be a far more acceptable way of developing the health service than
transferring more power to health professionals away from accountable representatives of
the British public.
Fewer contracts and contracts for longer
periods are clearly a more efficient and more secure way of running the health service
than thousands of contracts being negotiated every year. Is it really the case that the
Government believes it can save one tenth of all the management costs of the NHS?
The Labours election commitment was to
end the Conservatives internal market in healthcare. Given that there
will still be purchasers and providers, there will still be contracts (even if they are
called service agreements) there will still be an internal market, although now it will be
now Labours internal market. Is the Government really suggesting that purchasers
will have no choice at all as to which Hospital or Trust they buy their patients
health care from?
The test of this Governments commitment
to the NHS is not glossy White Papers, but the implementation of agreed best methods for
delivering the best healthcare and guarantees of adequate funding to pay for the public
health service the public wants.
Liberal Democrats today launched A
Bitter Pill, the first comprehensive survey of English chemists.
Simon Hughes MP, Liberal Democrat Health Spokesman,
launching the survey said:
It is alarming that four in five chemists
think the high level of the prescription charge means sick people are not getting the
medicine they need. This is the widest case of rationing in the country at the moment.
Local chemists are at the heart of the
countrys health and they are under threat. With two in five chemists thinking of
closing because they can no longer cope, this will make the coming winter even harder for
the NHS.
[ Ashdown, Paddy ] [ Beith, Alan ] [ Brand, Peter ] [ Bruce, Malcolm ] [ Campbell, Menzies ] [ Chidgey, David ] [ Foster, Don ] [ George, Andrew ] [ Hughes, Simon ] [ Kennedy, Charles ] [ Keetch, Paul ] [ Rendel, David ] [ Taylor, Matthew ] [ Tyler, Paul ]
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