Lansley departs as Health Secretary

by IainBate 4. September 2012 10:56

Andrew Lansley 2 (resized)

Health Secretary Andrew Lansley has been replaced by Culture Secretary Jeremy Hunt as part of David Cameron’s cabinet reshuffle.

Mr Lansley has been demoted to the role of Leader of the House after serving as Secretary of State for Health for two controversial years.

Mr Hunt said the new role was the “biggest privilege of his life” and that he was looking forward to starting work within his new department.

Lansley’s controversial reign will be remembered for the introduction of the Health and Social Care Act – which abolished Strategic Health Authorities and Primary Care Trusts in favour of GP-led clinical commissioning.

The move – which was which contested by a host of national organisations representing healthcare professionals – resulted in thousands of NHS workers losing their jobs during an era of austerity within the health service.

Dr Kaliash Chand, who was recently elected as BMA Deputy Chairman, welcomed Mr Lansley’s removal and hoped his replacement would end the marketisation of the NHS.

He commented: “He has done an utterly miserable job. Especially considering he was shadow health secretary for six years. He was unable to explain what he wanted to achieve. He was not a good communicator. In my view he has not been a very good health secretary. He epitomised everything that has gone wrong in the last two years in the NHS.”

Stephen Whitehead, ABPI Chief Executive, “welcomed” Mr Hunt to the new role and thanked the outgoing Andrew Lansley for his efforts over the last two years. “The NHS is highly regarded both here in the UK and around the world and Jeremy Hunt will face a number of challenges in not only safeguarding its short term success, but its long term future.”

Mr Whitehead said that one of the first challenges the new health secretary faces is getting the latest medicines to patients. He added that the pharmaceutical industry will continue to work closely with the DH to “design a pricing system” that provides value for money for taxpayers whilst “ensuring a healthy and productive environment for companies to research and develop the medicines of the future.”  

Mr Hunt, the MP for South West Surrey and the former Secretary of State for Culture, Olympics, Media and Sport, faced widespread criticism earlier this year when he urged David Cameron to support Rupert Murdoch’s bid for BSkyB – a month before he was due to decide whether the bid should be allowed.

Breaking the mould of primary care

by IainBate 25. July 2012 10:48

What does the ‘single operating model’ for primary care commissioning mean for GPs?

Dame Barbara Hakin - web The NHS Commissioning Board Authority’s ‘single operating model’ for primary care commissioning represents a major step in defining the relationship between GPs and the new NHS. As such, it is essential reading for anyone with a stake in prescribing behaviours and, more widely, in patient pathways.

A major question posed by the Lansley reforms is: who should commission the commissioners? If GP-led groups are responsible for commissioning secondary care, who can commission primary care? The answer, the NHS Commissioning Board, was greeted with mistrust by many GPs who asked why they needed some Big Brother watching over the job they had always done.

In addition, the passage of the Health and Social Care Act left a lot of broken glass scattered through primary care. The relationship between clinical outcomes and money, the involvement of the private sector in the NHS and the apparent fragmentation of the health service are issues that divided
the GP profession.

So the single operating model has the task not only of outlining new clinical and business relationships, but of building professional bridges. The Board tackles this challenge by saying up front that it seeks to
achieve “the right balance between national consistency and local decision making”.

Unlike earlier documents describing the infrastructure of the new NHS, Securing excellence in commissioning primary care does not list concrete developments to be in place by April 2013. Rather, it outlines a pattern of relationships that will develop from that date, when the new single operating model
for primary care commissioning becomes operative. It represents the parts of the new
NHS working together with a clear goal of outcome improvement.

The commissioning challenge
According to Dame Barbara Hakin, National Director for Commissioning Development, the new system aims to “tackle unwarranted variation and take positive steps towards raising the overall standard of primary care”. The document notes that primary care, while accounting for only 15% of the NHS budget, has a
profound role in making “preventative interventions” and influencing all the care patients receive.

The challenge of replacing “many different systems” for primary care commissioning with “a single national
operating model” without losing “vital local responsiveness”, the Board says, depends on “establishing relationships and arrangements across the new organisations” – including CCGs, whose health strategies
will set the context for primary care.

The NHSCB will be responsible for planning, securing and monitoring primary care services. Its local area teams will manage the performance of GPs and other primary care providers (dentists, community pharmacists and opticians), and will help to support providers in difficulty and deal with major emergencies.

The local area teams will support patient “choice and control in designing services that respond to their needs”, focusing on “the basic service offer” (such as early diagnosis) to reduce variations and health inequalities. Likewise, they will support the development of “local area clinical leadership teams” that draw on the expertise of all types of primary care clinicians. Finally, their focus on patient outcomes means they will look for “improvement strategies” at all times.

All together now
Most primary care commissioning will take place through the Board’s local area teams working with CCGs, local authorities and health and wellbeing boards. The Board as a central authority will “ensure consistency” and provide the framework for performance management and quality assurance. Crucially, this system involves “fewer managerial resources” and “larger geographical footprints” than the previous system. It does not remove local initiative: it just removes the SHA and PCT management layer.

At the heart of the model are the common operating procedures for local area teams, of which the most important is “to standardise the performance management frameworks and processes at practice, provider and individual levels”. Managing variability and the healthcare market are also key priorities.

Commissioning support services may also assist local area teams: emphasis is placed on the value of
business intelligence in providing “a single flow of standardised information”, and the potential for CCGs to share support for primary care development and redesign with local area teams.

Micro commissioning
CCGs themselves will work closely with the NHSCB to review the “micro commissioning decisions” made by
GPs in “each referral and prescription”. The Board says that its work with CCGs has shown they can progress effectively together towards “quality improvement” through benchmarking, data sharing and peer review. It notes further that CCGs will be able to commission integrated “wrap-around” community-based services in which GP practices can participate, with care taken to manage conflicts of interest.

The local area teams will establish relationships with a range of partners, including CCGs, Local Healthwatch, health and wellbeing boards, local authorities, Public Health England local units and the CQC. Clinical networks will feed into the primary care system “with a particular focus on early diagnosis and timely treatment”. Public health commissioners will advise local area teams on priorities for the local
population, and work with them to develop health improvement initiatives that may include primary care.

The Board concludes: “During the next three to six months, we will fully explore all the interdependent relationships critical for the operating model and take any action necessary to ensure that they will work effectively.” It encourages discussion of the model within PCT clusters and feedback on
potential improvements.

A business network
The single operating model for primary care commissioning is not so much a ‘one size fits all’ as an ‘all things to all people’. It shows the old hierarchical NHS giving way to something much closer to a business network, with shared rules and goals but different cultures. The imprecision of the arrangements described displays the will to promote clinical innovation and business
development.

The emerging structure is designed to give GPs more confidence that they will be neither isolated nor controlled. Those who need guidance and support will receive it, while others will have the freedom to change treatment pathways and business models. This will help to defuse opposition to reform in the
profession, while setting the stage for further changes.

For pharma, the new model points to the development of a complex and flexible customer network with many points of contact. Key account managers are much concerned with how primary care operates and the factors influencing it. This model shows primary care in a dynamic field of NHS and other stakeholders, responding to ideas from all sides: an exciting prospect for suppliers.

Lansley: Health Secretary will retain duty of care

by emma 3. November 2011 12:01

Pharma NHS News

Andrew Lansley has insisted he and his successors as Health Secretary will have a duty to provide a comprehensive health service via the NHS Commissioning Board and CCGs.

The Secretary of State for Health has said it will remain incumbent for those in the position to ensure services currently provided by the NHS.

Speaking at the National Association of Primary Care conference, Mr Lansley said “that is in law, in essence, what is described as a comprehensive health service.”

Changes to the duty of the Secretary of State to provide a comprehensive health service have been one of the most controversial aspects of the Health Bill since its release and its debate in the House of Commons and the House of Lords.

“It’s the duty that has been placed on me and my predecessors for more than 60 years and it will be incumbent on you to discharge that duty in the future - and it will remain incumbent on me and my successors to ensure that through the NHS Commissioning Board and through your CCGs that service is provided,” Mr Lansley told delegates.

The Health Secretary also emphasised the freedoms CCGs would have under the NHS reforms. But he outlined the opportunity would only come with the responsibility to ensure patients have “access to the NHS services” they require.

“You will have the freedom to choose who should support you in taking charge of local health services,” he said. “Clinical senates and clinical networks will be there to advise you, not to tell you what to do.

“You will have the freedom to structure yourselves to meet the needs of your population, providing you involve members of the public, with nursing and secondary care experience on board.”

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