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New NHS GP Bosses

Friday 20th January 2012

 

GMB PUBLISHES DETAILS OF 266 CLINICAL COMMISSIONING GROUP “PATHFINDERS” POISED TO TAKE OVER THE NHS AMID GROWING OPPOSITION TO HEALTH AND SOCIAL CARE BILL 

 

Government must release “risk register” showing dangers of its NHS reorganisation says GMB, the union for NHS workers in hospitals, ambulance services and the community

 

GMB today publishes details of 266 GP-led Clinical Commissioning Group “pathfinders” poised to take over the NHS in England (see Notes 1 and 2 in the document at the bottom of this release).

 

The Government’s Health and Social Care Bill is next due in the House of Lords on 8th February when it moves to report stage, which will involve further line-by-line examination. It will then move to third reading, the final chance for peers to debate and amend the Bill, before being sent back to the Commons.

 

The Government has already handed over £29bn of the £106bn NHS budget to the emerging Clinical Commissioning Groups (CCGs) (see Note 3), even though the Health and Social Care Bill which puts them on a statutory footing has not received parliamentary approval. The CCGs will be responsible for commissioning the majority of health services direct from providers, instead of having Primary Care Trusts coordinate local provision.

 

Health Secretary Andrew Lansley wants the majority of Primary Care Trusts to delegate their budgets and commissioning duties to the CCGs by April 2012 (see Note 4). He expects the CCGs officially to replace Primary Care Trusts by April 2013.

 

Mr Lansley is meanwhile refusing to release the Department of Health’s “risk register” assessing the dangers of his NHS reorganisation, despite an order from the Information Commissioner to do so (see Note 5).

 

The Royal College of Nursing and Royal College of Midwives yesterday joined GMB and other healthcare unions in calling for the Health and Social Care Bill to be scrapped.

 

Rehana Azam GMB National Officer for the NHS said: “It’s the height of irresponsibility to put these untried and untested new organisations in charge of a quarter of the NHS budget without proper parliamentary approval. GPs are being put in an awkward position. Control of the purse-strings gives them more opportunity to make money off the NHS. If GP groups can buy their own services, or increase their takings by scrimping on patient care, there is enormous potential for conflicts of interest.

 

More and more NHS unions are telling the Government to call off its reforms, but Andrew Lansley plainly isn’t listening. Our members are deeply concerned about the impact of private-sector competition on existing NHS services. And what will happen to NHS patients when hospitals are allowed to use almost half their beds and theatre time for private patients?

 

The Department of Health has done its own assessment of the risks posed by the Health and Social Care Bill, but won’t release the findings. What has the Health Secretary got to hide?”

 

Ends

 

Contact: Rehana Azam, GMB National Officer on 07841 181656 or GMB Press Office on 07921 289880 or 07974 251823.

 

Notes to editors:

 

1.     Profiles of emerging Clinical Commissioning Groups by region

 

Please note that Clinical Commissioning Groups are still in development, therefore details are subject to change. In December 2010, the Department of Health initiated “a rolling programme” of CCG “pathfinders” to “enable emerging consortia to get more rapidly involved in current commissioning decisions”. The pathfinders “will not necessarily evolve” into CCGs, “since GP practices will be able to adjust arrangements before applying to the NHS Commissioning Board for establishment”. (See DH, Liberating the NHS: Legislative framework and next steps, 15 December 2010).

 

2012-13 is meant to be the final year of transition to the new commissioning system, with the NHS Commissioning Board beginning to authorise CCGs to take on full budgetary responsibilities. CCGs that are not judged to be ready by April 2013 will be authorised only in part or in “shadow form”, with continued commissioning support from the Board. 

 

Source for the below profiles: Department of Health, “Pathfinder clinical commissioning groups by Strategic Health Authority clusters”.

 

Contact details for each CCG pathfinder, where available, are shown separately in Note 2 in the attached document below.

Profiles of emerging Clinical Commissioning Groups by region

   

2.         See attached document above.

 

3.         “Individual PCTs have been delegating elements of their commissioning funds to emerging

CCGs and Pathfinders during 2011/12 as part of their development. In the first half of 2011-12,

about £29 billion had been delegated to CCGs to spend on providing services for patients.” See

http://mediacentre.dh.gov.uk/2012/01/16/nhs-to-get-100m-cash-injection-to-improve-services/

 

4.         “Some PCTs have already delegated budgets and commissioning responsibilities to pathfinders, and I hope the majority will by next April. By October next year, the NHS Commissioning Board will begin to establish full clinical commissioning groups, delegating budgets to them directly. And by April 2013, commissioning groups will start to take statutory responsibility in their own right.” Pulse, http://www.pulsetoday.co.uk/newsarticle-content/-/article_display_list/12365234/time-to-move-forward-insists-lansley-as-new-wave-of-gp-pathfinders-unveiled.

 

5.         “Ministers have refused to release their own assessment of the risks to the health service from the reforms, despite an order from the information commissioner to do so. In a letter from the health minister Lord Howe to Labour's Lady Thornton, the government said an appeal on that decision would only be heard in mid-April and any hearing would take "two weeks". This effectively means any ministerial admission about the bill's consequences will not be released until after it is law”. Guardian, http://www.guardian.co.uk/society/2012/jan/18/nhs-reforms-hit-front-line.

 

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