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NHS and official government report.

(58 Posts)
Whitewavemark2 Tue 13-Dec-22 12:14:33

It is as we know already but now been officially confirmed.

The NHS is failing because of “government neglect”

I prefer “government policy”

How dare they.

No one voted for this. Nowhere does it say in their manifesto.

Ilovecheese Tue 13-Dec-22 12:35:06

We should have known what they would do though it is hardly a surprise.

Chocolatelovinggran Tue 13-Dec-22 13:29:35

Good to see it confirmed, isn't it? No longer the province of whingers/ anti-brexiteers/ the loony left ( delete as applicable).

kittylester Tue 13-Dec-22 14:24:34

It isn't only this government though is it. It is successive governments.

Wheniwasyourage Tue 13-Dec-22 14:32:04

But this party has been in power for what feels like for ever 12 years, kittylester, so could have gone a long way to sorting the NHS out instead of neglecting it.

Glorianny Tue 13-Dec-22 14:37:39

kittylester

It isn't only this government though is it. It is successive governments.

Like the Tory government before this one, and the coalition before that? Quite right! they none of them invested properly and all had privatisation plans, with quite a few MPs who have interests in private health care providers.
The NHS has never been safe in Tory hands.

kittylester Tue 13-Dec-22 15:40:20

My husband worked for the NHS for over 50 years so we have experience of lots of different types of government.

The NHS has been used as a political football for years by all shades of government.

Casdon Tue 13-Dec-22 15:44:26

The NHS is looked after better under Labour governments, because they believe in it. It never has been, and never will be perfect, but it’s a fact that patient satisfaction improves and targets are better met under Labour governments.
This is worth a read from an unbiased source.
fullfact.org/health/satisfaction-nhs-peaked-2010/

Whitewavemark2 Tue 13-Dec-22 17:09:22

The NHS was in the best shape it had been for donkeys years after the Labour government.

The Tories have taken away everything we had gained during this past decade.

Dinahmo Tue 13-Dec-22 17:22:16

The Tories (under Churchill) voted against the NHS 21 times when it was first set up. Thatcher wanted to get rid of it but Ken Clarke advised her that if she did she would lose the next election.

What's happening now is yet another example of "small state".

Siope Tue 13-Dec-22 17:30:47

The NHS is, obviously, political. Its creation and continuation is a political decision.

And so is the funding formula which supports it.

The report is clear: it gives Cameron’s decision to reduce the NHS’s annual budget increases from Labour’s 3.6% to an average of just 1.5% as the key reason for the service’s loss of capacity.

ronib Tue 13-Dec-22 20:13:13

What report is being quoted please? Is it one of many produced by The King’s Fund?
The King’s Fund is an independent charitable organisation working to improve health and care in England. Their vision is that the best possible heath and care is available to all.

ronib Tue 13-Dec-22 20:13:57

Health….

Whitewavemark2 Tue 13-Dec-22 20:21:42

Read it in The Guardian this morning, which quotes a government report - but I have recently been looking at Kings Fund and Nuffield reports, and they say much the same thing.

ronib Tue 13-Dec-22 21:42:32

Given that the King’s Fund was set up in 1897 …. I wonder just what direction the Nhs should take to finally be fit for purpose?

Whitewavemark2 Wed 14-Dec-22 06:56:50

Being supported by the government and proper funding would be a good start.

growstuff Wed 14-Dec-22 08:19:54

kittylester

My husband worked for the NHS for over 50 years so we have experience of lots of different types of government.

The NHS has been used as a political football for years by all shades of government.

The NHS is a political issue. The underlying principles are inextricably linked with political values - whether healthcare should be available for all or only for those who can afford it. One of the key roles of a government is to distribute and tax wealth; healthcare is one of the most expensive services provided for the people of the country, so of course it's political.

MaizieD Wed 14-Dec-22 09:16:34

healthcare is one of the most expensive services provided for the people of the country,

I don't in any way want this to sound critical, growstuff, but I think we must hold on to the fact that the state provided healthcare is also a major foundation of the domestic economy. All the money the state puts into it comes back into the economy (apart, possibly, from profits made by overseas suppliers) and is estimated to stimulate the economy by a 'multiplier' effect of 2.5. And the greater part of the state investment returns to the state by way of taxation. Keeping the NHS short of funds is a desperately bad political choice.

(P.S I know that you know all this, growstuff. It's a general comment, not specifically for you 😁)

growstuff Wed 14-Dec-22 09:43:15

Maizie I know. The point I was trying to make is that healthcare involves something like a sixth of the money the government spends. Therefore, it's not insignificant. It's one of the main roles of any government to decide how money is spent (however the money is created), so healthcare can't ever not be political.

Casdon Wed 14-Dec-22 10:11:05

growstuff

Maizie I know. The point I was trying to make is that healthcare involves something like a sixth of the money the government spends. Therefore, it's not insignificant. It's one of the main roles of any government to decide how money is spent (however the money is created), so healthcare can't ever not be political.

There’s political and political though isn’t there growstuff. There’s the version where the government sets a strategy and budget and believes that the people in charge of the NHS are capable of leading it, so is light touch- and there’s the ‘government knows best’ strategy where impossible targets are set without consultation, the service is micro-managed and reorganised constantly with no discernible benefit and the government blames the service for not achieving what was always impossible.

MaizieD Wed 14-Dec-22 10:17:06

I know that you know, growstuff, that's why I added a P.S. grin

But so many people seem to regard the NHS as a big black hole that money just disappears into. They really should be aware of its huge importance to the economy, as well as to the health of the nation.

ronib Wed 14-Dec-22 12:46:03

Surely Maizie D all countries with health care systems contribute in much the same way to their individual economies?
I can’t understand why the Nhs doesn’t prune non essential personnel and concentrate on more doctors and nurses plus better buildings with improved working conditions. It works for Switzerland why not here?

growstuff Wed 14-Dec-22 12:54:56

So who would do recruitment, performance management, payroll, organisation of appointments, buy equipment, rotas, building maintenance, IT systems, operate switchboards, record keeping, accounting and all the many other roles I've forgotten?

growstuff Wed 14-Dec-22 12:55:32

If anything, the NHS is under-managed.

Bodach Wed 14-Dec-22 13:08:40

Here's a passage from a speech made in parliament on 22 November 1995 on the state of the NHS. Guess who said it..

"I expect that the House has heard of the little document, which is circulating, about the boat race between the NHS and a Japanese crew. Both sides tried hard to do well, but the Japanese won by a mile. The NHS was very discouraged and set up a consultancy. The consultancy came to the conclusion that the Japanese had eight people rowing and one steering, whereas the NHS had eight people steering and one rowing. The NHS appointed people to look at the problem and decided to reorganise the structure of the team so that there were three steering managers, three assistant steering managers and a director of steering services, and an incentive was offered to the rower to row harder. When the NHS lost a second race, it laid off the rower for poor performance and sold the boat. It gave the money it got from selling the boat to provide higher than average pay awards for the director of steering services. That is what is happening all over the place. There is masses of bureaucracy in the health service and a denial of what people need."

Answer: Tony Benn.