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Socialist Health Association: Meeting in Pimlico Library today, 19 January 2013



It was nice to see many good friends, and of course my Twitter buddies, as outlined below.

We discussed the following issues within the space of a few hours. The meeting was chaired by Dr Brian Fisher, Chair of the Socialist Health Association, and Martin Rathfelder, Director of the Socialist Health Association.

Dr Brian Fisher had laid out the parameters of our organisation within the meeting:

In fact, much of our discussion was focused on how we should use our website for maximum effect within our organisations, and dangers of Twitter as being used being in a way which conveyed accurately the shared values and ethos of the Socialist Health Association (@SocialistHealth, website).

I am a lay member of SHA, though this is an independent unofficial record of my notes about the open meeting for all members of the SHA.

Campaigning:

SHA Website

There are currently around 800 pages on the website. The most popular part is the ‘Black Report’, and the documents on it. It is assumed that this is very popular because health inequalities.

Criticisms of how the website fails to describe how the SocialistHealth is constituted: e.g. who we are, how we are funded. On a good day, the website gets over 2000 hits. Front pages and interactivity have helped to boost our traffic significantly. Traffic has arisen markedly since July 2012. There have been problems with Facebook integration. There is a spam filter to take out spam comments.

Naomi Fabry then asked to explain how the website has developed. There are two main issues: visual and content editing. Those aspects are interlinked, in that design can help with the editing. Naomi suggested a question, what will it to have achieved. I considered the following:

  • Raised the profile of SHA: Engage people with the SHA and the Labour health policy, seen as part of a wider network (LFF, Twitter).
  • Website to provide a platform for informal discussion about topics, and produce specialist discussion papers. Terms and conditions. a problem is including young people. Information about meetings.
  • Engage people with reforms Health and Social Care Act: particularly consider key national policy issues, particularly in public health, health inequalities, health protection, health resource, patient safety, commissioning.

‘we are a critical friend of the Labour Party and, we are affiliated to the Labour Party’ Chair, Brian Fisher of ?@SocialistHealth ?#SHA2013

‘we do need to find a way of enabling debate, otherwise we will become a dinosaur’ ?#SHA2013

Physicians for a National Health Program http://www.pnhp.org

Adverts have to state clearly that they are adverts. There is an aim to have more adverts. The Socialist Health Association does not “endorse” any particular links.

Figures for 2012: http://jetpack.me/annual-report/37657278/2012/

 

Website policy and practice: Given recent concerns, how can the Director best promote the SHA? Do we need a protocol?  In what will be a “challenging year” (s) for the party, including its affiliates and the NHS,  how  can we best manage ALL our communications, (website, social media, meetings, conferences strategies and resources), particularly when both the NHS /Health & Labour will be under even greater attack,maintain credibility, and avoid foreseeable problems in 2015.

This was a wide-ranging discussion about how best to introduce ourselves on the social media, including Twitter. There had been problems with how the Socialist Health Association appeared to be discussing certain elements of national policy, such as competition and closure of hospitals. I brought up the timing of some discussions, e.g. Sean Worth re: competition, on our website was inappropriate, given the other pro-competition articles in the national media. I anticipated the same problem for how the Socialist Health Association was to be perceived over Lewisham.

Defending the NHS programme of events GMB, Equality Trust, Macmillan

The constitution of “Healthwatch” was discussed. There is support through lay leader and training to consider this programme.

 

Developments in the NHS – what do we expect will happen over the next year:

Health policy under the coalition government A mid-term assessment

Mid-Staffs and quality

 

This may turn out to be a huge attack on the Labour Party ideology and ethos; and used by some to advance an agenda for privatising the NHS. It was noted in terms of media management that the decision over Lewisham may exactly coincide with the publication of the Francis Report regarding Mid Staffs.

  • CCGs and tendering
  • Private income in Foundation Trusts
  • The Failure Regime
  • Public and Patient Involvment, Healthwatch
  • Any Qualified Provider
  • Social Enterprises
  • Freedom of Information
  • Public Health
  • Labour Party policy discussions
  • Children, Food and Obesity

Health and care policy review:Whole-Person Care

Social Enterprises

Economic growth and inequality

Local Government Conference 9 – 10 Feb in Nottingham

Next meeting: AGM Saturday 9th March, Hackney

 

My top tweeps of 2010



Many thanks to the following who have made this year so rewarding for me, especially for support during my father’s untimely death on 10 November 2010. I met some of the following tweeps at Conference in Manchester 2010, which was a very happy occasion for me before my father died. My father was devoted to Labour, and backed David Miliband. I am especially grateful to people of other political persuasions as me, for fulfilling the necessary ‘checks and balances’ on my political behaviour.

@gedrobinson @pbpositive @shivmalik1 @tugsandtost @yorkierosie @RosieCosy @SallyBercow@KerryMP @AndyBellUK @Iain_Fale @ed_miliband @askforyourself @a6ruled@starsparkle_uk @hannmrfitz @taminam @anpa2001 @kingofwhitton @brianfmoylan@calamitykate @mpbell92 @dazmando @david_fagan @lawclouduk @tomwilliamsisme@tulipsiddiq @mikekatz @hardyduncan @metalguru33 @benjaminbutter@johnhaymes1977 @itsmotherswork @danlew0 @mr_onions @tankthetories@bdifficile @sarahbrown1984 @cjmckeon @big__kev @mrsvb @willmill82@emjayem38 @cliffsull @emjayem38 @cliffsull @salmanj10 @misterclive@agnt_orange @gary_baker_uk @liza_harding @aprecious @davidbutler100@mrchrislent @odbe34 @aaron_kiely @aaron_kiely @andy_s_64 @alasdairross@calumsplath @markfergusonuk @jacksterd @novocastrianrob @paulstpancras@toryradio @johnmcternan @anthonypainter @eiohel @shakusjakus @robbarnstone@gordonlyew1 @swindonqueso @vachedemer @dnsnow @robinbogg @markwrightuk88@sarahhyn @lindylooz @peterlord77 @stol1975 @followfriday @lisajames @fionamce@fatcouncillor @mattb_uk @thrashdanny @andrewkenning @richswitch @kp_ld@mirandafay @ukstartup @harryb22 @mr_andy_c @harrylangford @liamyoung@lukejcr @tamfaetroon @hmsenterprise @ddom2006 @lord_credo @jruddy99@barrymccomish @imstillred @lastyearsman @blissedoutjo @colchester1648@iancarnegie @andyraywimbldon @harryb22 @tamsinchan @dyslexic_trojan@hazico_jo @rosiecosy @cjmillsnun @sussexlad @andykinsey @bnzss @barrymccomish@spiderplantblog @toryatsea @magsnews @debsalini @parlez_me_ntory@sarahstanbridge @maizeyr @mulberrybush @walaaidris @sowadally

The warped logic of Gideon Osborner



Somebody who is definitely worth following on Twitter is a young chap called ‘Gideon Osborner’.

This is his most recent Avatar.

I received a reply from him this evening:

@shibleylondon: “Count has two fingers ; sound familiar?” < in these days of cuts a lot of people make do with giving me one #yah?

That just about sums up the flawed logic, doesn’t it. I was remarking on the fact that most people would happily show him the two finger salute in a different context. However, Osborner’s flawed logic is why have 2 fingers when you can make do perfectly well with one. I suppose the same goes for legs. Apart from the fact you can’t do anything that is….

The future of control orders



A friend of mine tweeted this morning: “254,998,923 laptops taken out of hand luggage and then 254,998,923 put back into hand luggage: success or fail?”

On issues of national security, many members of the general public should like to believe that they have an integral influence in matters of national security, the legislators, we all admit, decide upon national policy. Ultimately it is the Home Secretary, Theresa May MP, who is able to propose legislation on the basis of her advisors, the think tanks, the public, the media, the police, the rest of the judicial system, and of course the intelligence services MI5, MI6. Obviously, it is impossible to ignore the raft of events, such as 9/11 and the Mumbai bombing. There is in face a growing notion internationally, irrespective of political affiliations, that in the wake of September 11th, many civil liberties had been curtailed or suspended. There has been historical disagreement concerning how much risk to national security or civil liberties should be taken.

The need to achieve an appropriate balance of these seemingly competing goals was evident. In the USA, lawyers from the Department of Homeland Security, Federal Bureau of Investigation, and the U.S. Army called for aggressive prosecution of the terrorist proven suspects, while lawyers advocating civil liberties argue strongly for the safeguarding of individual rights, lest we cede victory to terrorists through the compromise of principles that define our view of a liberal democracy.

We are surprisingly at one here with the U.S., reflecting a strong entrenchment of our law in European law as a result of the European Communities Act (1972) (as amended), and numerous subsequent treaties. The legal notion of ‘proportionality’ originally developed in European Law, but it has been readily applied in English Law in the House of Lords and Supreme Court. One specific definition of proportionality given by Lord Lowry in the leading British case ‘Brind’, which examined the principle as one that requires a reasonable relation between a decision, its objective and the circumstances of any given case. This concise definition shows how proportionality is a theory that is ultimately intuitive to human nature.  A vast majority feel that Labour went too far in the counter-terrorism legislation, which is a massive own goal in that one of the first achievements of Tony Blair was to introduce the Human Rights Act (1997).

In fact, Labour has had terms in coming to terms with their past on crucial matters of civil liberties, in lengths of detention and ID cards. For example, officers used Section 44 of the Terrorism Act 101,248 times but just 506 of those stopped were taken into custody and none on suspicion of plotting terror attacks. Furthermore, Home Office data provide that no terror suspect was held for more than 14 days before being charged, just half the 28-day limit brought in by the last Government. Shami Chakrabarti, of civil rights group Liberty, insisted Section 44 was a “crude and blunt instrument” that was also counter-productive. Shami Chakrabarti further said: “It costs us dearly in race equality and consent=based policing with very little in terms of enhanced security.” I fully agree.

Another bone of contention are ‘control orders’, also introduced under 2005 anti-terrorism legislation. Ministers have to sign an order to place a terrorism suspect under close supervision that some say is similar to house arrest. The orders were introduced after the then Law Lords declared that the previous system of detaining foreign terrorism suspects without trial, or without prospect of deportation, breached human rights. The previous Labour government said it still needed a mechanism, which would allow it to control the lives of some suspects whom it said it could not prosecute because of the rules over the use of secret intelligence in trials.

Control orders were originally introduced as an alternative to putting people in prison, that originally was supposed to not leave individuals suffering from a breach of liberty and personal freedom (1995). Obviously, curtailing this liberty and personal freedom has to be a necessary, balanced and proportional response to a threat of national security, and the Law Lords have thus far said that control records are legal. However, not everyone sees it this way. The issue of control orders, under which terror suspects are placed under “virtual house arrest”, is the one of the most sensitive civil liberties issues for ministers as opposition to Labour’s authoritarian counter-terror policy was seen as part of the glue that made the coalition possible.

Tom Brake MP, the co-chair of the Lib Dem home affairs parliamentary party committee, has said there was no evidence to suggest that control orders were effective in preventing terrorism. The other signatories of the letter, Baroness Sally Hamwee, and Lord Martin Thomas, represent Lib Dem peers. As the English legal system is a system of precedent, I feel that it any changes to the law could be introduced, but it would be their Lordships’ prerogative to decide whether any subsequent changes to the law are legal or not. And I fully trust Lords Hoffman, Neuberger and Baroness Hale, amongst others, to analyze with the legal issues with great precision if or when the time should come.

According to the most up to date figures for January 2010, there are 12 control orders in force – three fewer than a year before. Some 45 people have been subject to the controls since the system was created. Six of the foreign nationals held under the restrictions have been deported. The political situation is messy, as reflected in a rather informal conversation between Baroness Kennedy and Theresa May on the Andrew Marr show this morning. Liberal Democrats have openly warned David Cameron for the first time that any decision not to scrap control orders would jeopardise the coalition’s civil liberties credentials.

Senior Lib Dem backbenchers and peers have also written to Downing Street pressing for the limit on detention without charge to be cut from 28 days to 14 days, arguing that two-weeks is a “wholly adequate” time to bring charges, even in the most complicated cases of multiple terrorist attacks. The intervention from Lib Dem MPs and peers comes after an intense lobbying campaign by the security services. Jonathan Evans, the head of MI5, recently wrote to Cameron saying that he could not guarantee the safety of the public if the control order regime was scrapped. Whitehall officials confirm that MI5 has played its “full part in the debate”. The review of counter-terrorism powers was set up immediately after the general election, with a specific remit to look urgently at the future of control orders and the wider matter of counter-terror measures and programmes.

The home secretary, Theresa May, is thought to have recently supported the retention of control orders as a necessary intervention despite repeated interventions by Nick Clegg, whose Lib Dem manifesto clearly had called for them to be scrapped. It feels as if a pendulum over civil liberties is still in damped smooth harmonic motion, but at least the review and the Supreme Court will help the UK legislature and public reach a stable equilibrium.

Social media and I



I set up ‘Law and Medicine’ as an educational project, as I have nearly 7 degrees in law and medicine. However, as a disabled academic, I believe that these issues should be accessible to all, hence I wish to maintain this blog. For further information about my motivation for doing so, please refer to the following websites.

The Law and Medicine blog

Personal blog 1

Personal blog 2

Twitter

Facebook

LinkedIn

Curriculum vitae

Discussion network

Oh yes, I support Labour, and I think our new leader is wonderful!

Dr Shibley Rahman, Director of Law and Medicine

QS BA MA MB BChir PhD MRCP(UK) LLB(Hons)

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