The New NHS - What It Means For Us Live chat with Rethink policy specialist from 12.30 on Thursday 25 Nov
#1
Posted 09 November 2010 - 05:27 PM
Live chat with Rethink policy specialist from 12.30 on Thursday 25 November
Hi All,
How do you feel about a future where GPs will commission health services in their area? What do you most want to see changed about the current model, with Primary Care Trusts etc.?
Please post your questions and thoughts about NHS reforms here!
Here are some things that Rethink have already said around this subject:
Our report: NHS Reform 2010, making it work for mental health
1 Oct - GP survey underlines BMA warnings over NHS plans
12 July - White paper to hand mental health commissioning to GPs, but most don’t have necessary expertise
#2
Posted 09 November 2010 - 05:37 PM
#3
Posted 09 November 2010 - 06:33 PM
So what does it mean for us? GP surgeries will be run like a business and the private sector involvment will make the NHS even more of postcode lottery. My GP is top quality, it took me years to fins a good doctor, but i'm not sure about his accountancy skills... It stinks to high heaven and it will be those with the quietest voices who will be hit the hardest - just like welfare reform. This government's whole phillosophy is 'the strongest will survive'. Andrew Lansley can kiss my arse.
Ditko
x
#4
Posted 09 November 2010 - 09:43 PM
http://spiritualemer...http://spiritualemergency.blogspot.com/
With Friends Like These - Who Needs Enemies?
#7
Posted 10 November 2010 - 03:09 PM
My gp will have to invest in admin staff, as a small surgery he'll have problems, the admin staff will concentrate on the procedures they know well and use a lot, any procedure that would help weirdo me as a minority of one will be ignored
#8
Posted 10 November 2010 - 03:57 PM
ramboghettouk, on 10 November 2010 - 03:09 PM, said:
My gp will have to invest in admin staff, as a small surgery he'll have problems, the admin staff will concentrate on the procedures they know well and use a lot, any procedure that would help weirdo me as a minority of one will be ignored
This is roughly how my GP described it. He's brutally honest and very straight talking. I'm sure the politicians version will have a different take in it. You can't kid a kidder.
#9
Posted 17 November 2010 - 12:20 AM
Further attempts at elucidation of this bizarre situation - with threats of recourse to UN legislation - resulted in the most mealy-mouthed of initial responses, which - after due consideration and reflection - ended with a suggestion of referral to a necessarily specialist service. That. I am pleased to say - although in its early stages - seems to be garnering results. One of the consequences of taking up this service was that I had to remove myself from other support networks, for fear that their co-mingling might be counter-productive. I was forced to choose: "Daddy or Chips?"
This I feel is an entirely unfair situation, although it was eventually explained to me; one of the many problems seem to be that little is explained in advance - especially during the early stages of diagnosis - which makes opting for a sensible elected course of situational management and, hopefully, route to "recovery" when one is probably in the least able position to make either sensible or elective decisions seems to be a total dereliction of duty of care by the State and its operatives.
For Goodness' sake, when I came to ask, repeatedly, for help, I was turned away. What faith can I - or anyone? - have in such a system that says "wait until we have undergone a spending review, realised we cannot fund it " and - well - try to fight for healthcare provision against the vested interests of our new medicinal overlords (GPs, Pharma and their NICE pushers ) and their obscene salaries for providing at best a service that should either be out-sourced or user-led?
^^ö^^ CaptSpaceBat - Freedom through Art ^^ö^^
Section of "Hold That Thought" © Ian Springham, 2010
#10
Posted 17 November 2010 - 09:28 AM
#13
Posted 19 November 2010 - 02:50 AM
I have not seen him for 5 years and he has not asked to see me to see how i am in that time.

Yet inside there is this perpetual nagging doubt;
the feeling we are possessed by a 'subtle lack of togetherness'
My newspaper
#14
Posted 19 November 2010 - 04:00 AM
http://www.telegraph...P-bookings.html
... like pretending you have a bomb in your hand luggage at the airport is a good idea.
#15
Posted 19 November 2010 - 07:32 AM
Ditko, on 19 November 2010 - 04:00 AM, said:
http://www.telegraph...http://www.telegraph.co.uk/health/healthnews/8144120/Remote-call-centres-could-handle-GP-bookings.html
... like pretending you have a bomb in your hand luggage at the airport is a good idea.
More pyramidal control systems and even as Cameron preaches giving power away with one hand he's centralizing critical elements of social control with the other. It's a shell game and power grab from the centre. Did the politican promise the people sweeties? Big surprise....looks like the politican lied again!
#16
Posted 20 November 2010 - 04:00 AM
These proposals are insane, nobody other than the government thinks they will improve anything, just more ideoligy.
The New NHS - What It Means For Us... I'm not sure yet, but it's becoming clearer.
#17
Posted 25 November 2010 - 12:36 PM
As a quick recap, here are some of the key changes being proposed by the Secretary of State for Health, Andrew Lansley.
- Groups of GPs, called GP Consortia, to take over responsibility for decisions and spending on health services.
NHS commissioning Board to be established 2011-12, and shadow GP Consortia to be in place.
- NICE will be developing 150 ‘standards’ setting out the essentials of good quality provision that patients should expect for different health conditions. GP Consortia will have to demonstrate that they are working to these standards.
- LINKs will be developed to become a local and national HealthWatch
- GP Consortia and local authorities will assess local needs and plan service provision together through new Health and Wellbeing Boards
- Local authorities will have new responsibilities for public health i.e. prevention and health promotion
- There will be greater focus on health outcomes, rather than targets, and so far these outcomes include several measures specific to mental illness
#18
Posted 25 November 2010 - 12:36 PM
[Edit - she beat me to it...]
Chris
#19
Posted 25 November 2010 - 12:36 PM
Although Lansley seems to have a high degree of selective deafness if anyone says anything other than how wonderful these reforms are, I feel that organisations such as Rethink need to continue to lobby vigorously on the health white paper. There is such a lack of public facing information from the government that many people have no clue what this really means, and it is tragic that patient organisations are being left to do this with the limited resources they have, though it is just as well they do take this on!
#20
Posted 25 November 2010 - 12:44 PM

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