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: Britain
Britain: Labour government moves to dismantle public health
care
By Jean Shaoul
6 January 2003
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Alan Milburn, the secretary of state for health, has announced
a series of measures designed to dismantle the comprehensive and
publicly provided system of public health care in Britain. The
National Health Service (NHS) will become little more than funder
and regulator, not provider, of health care services that will
be drastically reduced in scale, causing untold suffering and
hardship to millions of workers and their families.
The Labour government indicated that not only will these measures
provide a model for the rest of Britains public services,
but it is also actively promoting them all over the world on behalf
of British corporations.
The new arrangements presage a move to what ministers are referring
to as a social insurance system, where patients are treated by
a diversity of providers including the private sector, overseas
corporations, the voluntary sector as well as traditional NHS
bodies and new foundation trusts. A regulator will determine which
services will be provided at public expense and by which hospitals,
a system akin to the US Health Management Organizations (HMOs).
By far the most important measure is the intention in April
2003 to devolve 75 percent of the Strategic Health Authorities
three year budget allocations to the Primary Care Trusts (PCTs)
to pay for patients health care needs. This must cover the
cost of running General Practice (GP) surgeries, including doctors
and Practice nurses salaries, clinics and drugs as well
as the cost of commissioning hospital and other services on behalf
of their patients.
Under the new system, set out in the Department of Healths
Reforming NHS Financial Flows: introducing payment by results,
the commissioners, predominantly the PCTs, will pay hospitals
and other providers on the basis of the number of treatments they
carry out. National tariffs will be introduced for almost every
non-emergency procedure, weighted to take into account higher
costs in the London area. Fees will also be weighted to encourage
greater efficiencythe use of day case surgery for exampleor
to reduce waiting lists for certain specialist areas.
This constitutes a major change from the present system whereby
hospitals are paid a fixed amount regardless of the number of
patients they treat. Once the fee per service and the PCTs
budgets come into play, patients may find that their GPs have
run out of cash to pay for their hospital treatment. GPs will
be forced to determine treatment on the basis of cost and to do
deals with private insurersmany of whom are financing their
new surgeriesto sell insurance to their patients.
NHS finance director Richard Douglas told a recent conference
of the Healthcare Financial Management Association in London,
This [the present system] does not incentivise efficiency,
it doesnt reward performance, it doesnt provide a
firm basis for planning. It wont support a system where
patients exercise choice and will not work with a diversity of
providers.
Milburn has also announced a second range of measures designed
to break up the monopoly position of the NHS and open health care
up to the private sector.
Firstly, a network of 25 clinics is to be set up which will
carry out fast track diagnostic tests and routine surgical treatments
such as hip replacements and cataract surgery for NHS patients.
The clinics will be built and run by the private sector and British
and overseas firms are to be invited to bid to set them up. The
private operators will be guaranteed a minimum volume of patients,
encouraged to run a chain of clinics rather than just single units
and use overseas staff. These clinics are expected to handle more
than 150,000 patients by 2004. The government has said that the
clinics will also be allowed to treat private patients.
Secondly, three of the eight acute NHS hospitals that failed
to achieve any stars in the governments review
of hospital performance last July are to be taken out of normal
NHS management and run under three year management contracts.
The Royal United Hospital in Bath, United Bristol Healthcare and
the Good Hope Hospital in Birmingham are the first hospitals to
be franchised out, under a scheme announced by Milburn last May
for approved NHS hospitals and private sector corporations to
take over failing NHS hospitals.
The other five hospitals deemed to be failing would be given
longer to improve their performance.
Milburn has given eight private sector corporations the right
to bid: Bupa and BMI, Britains largest hospital groups,
the Swedish owned Capio, Interhealth Canada, Hospitalia activHealth
from Germany, Serco the British owned facilities management company,
Secta Group and the consultancy firm Quo Health. This is despite
the fact that some of these corporations have never run hospitals
before and none have run hospitals the size and complexity of
NHS hospitalswhich are at least 10 times the size of a typical
private hospital specialising in elective surgery.
Foundation Hospital Trusts
By far the most contentious of the governments proposals
is the establishment of foundation hospitals. These proposals
were devised by the governments advisers that include private
insurers such as Kaiser Permanente and were first given an airing
in the Institute of Directors policy paper, Healthcare
in the UK: the need for reform that advocates breaking up
the NHS and switching health care provision to private and voluntary
sectors.
The prize is enormous: the governments health budget
is currently £58 billion, of which the acute hospitals constitute
by far the largest component.
According to the Department of Healths Guide for NHS
Foundation Trusts published earlier in December and to be
enacted during this parliamentary session, the top performing
hospitals will be allowed to apply for foundation hospital status.
Foundation Hospital Trusts (FHTs) will be independent hospitals,
free from NHS control and run nominally by a board of local stakeholders
on a not for profit basis. While they will not be allowed to sell
their core assets, they will be allowed to raise finance for new
facilities from capital markets and to set up joint ventures with
the private sector. Free from NHS control, foundation hospitals
will be able to break with national bargaining arrangements and
negotiate or impose their own pay scales and conditions of service.
FHTs would be encouraged to generate new sources of income.
Hospitals currently do this by opening private beds, leasing out
parts of their estate or allowing private sector companies to
operate services on their premises. For example, National Car
Parks run hospital car parking, Capita and Serco provide visitor
and staff catering, retail outlets such as McDonalds or WH Smith
operate on the hospital forecourt and Patient Line supply telephones
and televisions. The hospitals will be able to spin off companies
in order to exploit the intellectual property of patients and
their tissue samples, taken from patients during surgery, for
research. Patient data has become a valuable commodity that many
genetic and biotech companies would like to own and exploit.
The inherent but unstated logic of foundation hospital status
is twofold. Firstly the private sector partners and
finance providers will take over the running of the hospital in
all but name. Secondly, the NHS, paid for out of taxation and
largely free at the point of use, will be reduced to a basic service
forcing patients to take out top up private insurance. The foundation
hospital could, for example, subcontract the entire running of
the hospital to the private sector.
Foundation trusts will operate under licence from an independent
regulator, who will have the power to alter the range of
services provided for NHS patients. The licence to provide various
services could be withdrawn and NHS patients would be entitled
only to a basic menu of treatments as currently occurs under the
US system of managed care.
One has only to look at what has happened to the NHS dental
service to know what is in store. Under the NHS, patients are
offered a limited range of treatments that are only free to the
young, the elderly and those on benefits. The net result is that
it is almost impossible to find an NHS dentist in London and the
South East. Extensive dental treatment not on the NHS menu means
going into debt.
The foundation hospitals would only be required to meet a reasonable
level of demandcommensurate with their business plans and
contractual commitments. As more and more hospitals move to foundation
status, any conception of a planned service to meet the needs
of all would go. Each hospital would be able to carry out only
those activities that met its own financial needs. It means the
end of a universal and comprehensive service.
The US experience
The new measures will lead, as private provision invariably
does, to unequal provision. A few examples from the US health
care system make this abundantly clear. While some US citizens
have access to the most modern health care facilities in the world,
a staggering 44 million people (17 percent) have no health care
at all because of the crippling costs of insurance. Others have
to pay at the point of need when they discover that their insurance
does not provide full cover. One third of all personal bankruptcies
are the result of health care bills. Despite a massive 14 percent
of GDP being spent on health care, including nine percent of GDP
from government sources, the US ranks 37th out of 191 countries
in terms of the health of its citizensthe lowest of any
industrial country.
The cost of running such an inefficient system accounts for
one quarter of total costs and fraud has spiralled out of control.
For the years 1991-1995, the FBI estimated that fraud alone was
costing a massive $418 billion.
The government has announced its proposed changes at a point
where the NHS has all but collapsed after years of underfunding.
The recently published Wanless report estimated that between 1972
and 1998, the British government had underspent by £267
billion between 1972 and 1998 compared to the European average
that includes the poorer Mediterranean countries.
Hospitals have a £3.2 billion backlog of maintenance
and repairs. More than one third of beds have gone in the last
10 years. Hundreds of thousands of people wait months to get a
hospital appointment and even longer for hospital treatment because
of lack of capacity. Much of the system is in deficit. Many trusts
predict that they will not achieve financial balance this year
and it is widely rumoured that only three Primary Care Trusts
believe they will do so.
Senior hospital officials fiddle the waiting listsa key
performance indicatorin an attempt to stop their hospitals
falling into the failing category.
Work conditions are so stressful that nurses are leaving the
NHS in droves. They are replaced by nursing agencies that charge
huge commissions and, according to the Audit Commission, cost
the NHS nearly a billion pounds a year.
A recent Kings Fund Report, Great to be Grey,
warned that one in seven health service workers could retire in
the next five years. The NHS in England plans to recruit at least
15,000 more GPs and hospital consultants, 30,000 more therapists
and scientists, and 35,000 more nurses, midwives and health visitors
by 2008. But these plans, insufficient in themselves to redress
the problem, could be scuppered since there are 150,000 staff
aged over 50 and many of them plan to take early retirement because
they are so fed up with heavy workloads, long hours and low morale.
Fewer young people want a career in the health service, according
to Sandra Meadows, the reports author.
There is an acute recruitment and funding crisis within NHS
laboratories responsible for identifying and monitoring diseases.
According to the Royal College of Pathologists, the laboratories
are 1,000 staff shorthardly surprising when some technicians
start on just £11,000 a year. Its president, Sir John Lilleyman,
accused the Department of Health of failing to recognise the consequences
of under-investment. There is a huge threat and they are
not noticing it. If we dont do something, with the increasing
demand on pathology services it is going to collapse, he
said.
See Also:
Britain: White Paper
heralds dismantling of National Health Service
[7 June 2002]
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