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Home » Competition and markets » The section 75 NHS regulations exposed muddled thinking all round; but is there really no alternative?

The section 75 NHS regulations exposed muddled thinking all round; but is there really no alternative?



 

It’s easy to lose sight of Labour’s fundamental question in terms of the economic model; viz, whether the State should, in fact, intervene in any failing #NHS healthcare (in a financial sense).  That is what distinguishes it from neoliberal models of healthcare, including the New Labour one. It is a reasonable expectation that the healthcare regulators will uphold professional standards of the medical and nursing professions, whether in the public or private sector.

One of the most memorable experiences in my whole journey of the section 75 NHS regulations was Richard Bourne, the Chair of the Socialist Health Association, asking me what would probably happen at the end of the day. I originally replied saying that I was not an astrologer, but, as I thought about that question more, I became totally convinced it was a very reasonable question to ask. In management, private or public, when one is uncertain about the outcome, a perfectly valid tool is the ‘scenario analysis’, where one considers the various options and their likelihood of success. Also, if you really don’t know what the eventual outcome is, which might be the case, say, if you have to produce a complicated budget for the whole of the next year, you can to some extent ‘hedge your bets’ by doing a rolling forecast which updates your plan on the basis of virtually contemporaneous information.

Section 75 NHS regulations had become a very ‘Marmite issue’. Richard was right to pick up on the fact that the world would not necessarily implode with the successful resolution by the House of Lords of the second version of the regulations. On the other hand, the event itself marked a useful occasion for us all to take stock of where the overall ‘direction of travel’ was heading. Wednesday’s charge, led by Lord Phil Hunt, was as ‘good as it gets’. Reasons for why Labour in places produced a lack lustre attack is that some individuals themselves were alleged to have significant conflicts of interest, or some elderly Peers were unable to organise suitable accommodation so that they could negotiate the ‘late night’ vote. Lord Walton of Detchant, whom all junior neurologists will have encountered in their travels at some point in the UK, said convincingly he had a look at the Regulations, and felt that they would be OK even given the ‘torrent’ of communication he had personally received about it.

I certainly don’t wish to rehearse yet again the arguments for why the section 75 NHS regulations appears to be farming out the NHS to the private sector, but in the 1997 Labour manifesto, where Tony Blair was likely to win, Labour promised to abolish the purchaser-provider split. It didn’t. Labour likewise is promising now the repeal the current reincarnation of the Health and Social Care Act. It might not. There is substantial brand loyalty to Labour, over the NHS, such that the Conservatives would find it hard to emulate the goodwill of the public towards it that is shown to Labour. Given that the market has been implemented in the NHS, the Conservatives and Liberal Democrats are now arguing that they wish to make the market ‘a fair playing field’, which is of course a reasonable aspiration provided that a comprehensive NHS can be maintained for the public good.

Many have no fundamental objection to running a NHS most efficiently. I often find that health policy experts who have little clinical knowledge find themselves going on wild goose chases about efficiency in the NHS. For example, I remember the biggest barrier to progressing with a patient with an acute coronary syndrome is that it would be impossible to get a troponin blood result off the HISS computer system for hours, such that you would be forced to track somebody down from the laboratory itself. Co-ordinated care can mean better care. The best example I can think of is where a GP prescribes Viagra for a man with erectile problems in the morning, the patient collects all his new medication from the local chemist, the patient then takes the first tablet around lunchtime, the patient has sex with his partner in the evening, but unfortunately attends A&E in the evening for angina (chest pain). Modern advice (for example here)  would argue that an emergency room should take a very cautious approach in administering nitrates, a first line medication for angina, within 24 hours of a dose of viagra. What a Doctor would do in this particular scenario is not something I wish to discuss, but it is simply to demonstrate that patient care would benefit from ‘joined up’ operational processes, where the emergency room doctor had knowledge of what had been prescribed etc. that day.

So, it probably was no wonder that there was ‘muddled thinking’ all round. Baroness Williams is a case in point. She acknowledges that many in the social media think that she personally, with the Liberal Democrats en masse, has ‘sold out’ on the NHS. And yet she talks about a deluge of misinformation from organisations such as 38 degrees who cannot be shot for being the messenger for a concerned public; that presumably is consistent with the Liberal Democrats yearning for ‘a fair society’? Lord Clement-Jones attacked the person not the ball, advancing the argument that lawyers will always provide a legal opinion which favours the client. However, many agree with David Lock QC in his concerns on how the legislation could be interpreted to go further than the previously existant legislation from Labour over the Competition and Cooperation Panel. Indeed, Labour in the late 2000s had tried to legislate for public contracts, with attention to how their statutory instruments might be consistent with EU competition law.

However, the muddled thinking did not stop there. Only a few people consistently explained why the regulations were a ‘step too far’, and it is no small achievement that the original set of regulations had to be abandoned. The general public themselves can be legitimately blamed for muddled thinking. The general impression is that they resent bankers being awarded bonuses, resent the explosion of the deficit due to the banking crisis, but did not wish the banks to implode. The general impression is also they are happy with the previously high satisfaction ratings of the NHS, do not wish the NHS budget to be cut, and yet do not want ‘failing NHS trusts’ to be shut down altogether. Meanwhile, the Francis report exposed sheer horror in how some patients and their relatives or families experienced care from the NHS, and there are concerns that similar phenomena might be exposed in other Trusts. All of this is totally cognitively dissonant with the idea of ‘efficiency savings’ in the NHS, with billions of surplus being given back to the Treasury instead of frontline patient care. The issue about whether private companies should be allowed to make a profit from healthcare is a difficult one, when compared to an issue of whether parents can have a ‘choice’ as to whether to send their children to independent schools. However, many members of the general public would prefer any profit made in the NHS to be put back into patient care, rather than lining the pockets of shareholders or producing healthy balance sheets of private equity investors. The section 75 NHS regulations has done nothing for a discussion about how to maximise patient safety, nor the value of employees in the NHS. Managers in the NHS appear to be pre-occupied with ‘excellence awards’, innovation and leadership, but appear to have lost sight of the big picture of the real distress shown by some working at the coal face in the NHS.

Monitor, the new economics healthcare regulator, has a pivotal part to play; but they are an economic regulator ensuring fair competition, so it is hard to see as yet how they can best secure value for the patient rather than dividend for the providers. This is a Circle to be squared (pardon the pun). Possibly the only way to ensure that the NHS does not become a ‘race to the bottom’ (where “I don’t care who provides my healthcare as long as it’s the most efficient” becomes “I don’t care who provides my healthcare as long as it’s the cheapest and delivers most profit for the private provider)” is to ensure that people who are clinically skilled are involved in procurement decisions, or in regulatory decisions. This is the only way where yet another one of Earl Howe’s promises might be fulfilled; that local commissioners can commission services, even if they are only available from the NHS, if it happens that ‘there is no alternative’. Possibly doom-and-gloom is not needed yet, but it cannot be said that Lord Warner did much to inspire faith as the only Labour peer to vote against Labour’s “fatal motion”. Many people did indeed share the sense of despair felt by Lord Owen before, during and after the debate. However, Labour has to react to the present and think about the future. It cannot rewind much of the past, for example current PFI contracts in progress. The public have already exhausted themselves with the debate over ‘who is to blame over PFI?’, where both Labour and Conservatives have contributed in different ways to the implementation of PFI, and there are still some who believe that the benefits of infrastructure spending through PFI are yet to be seen. But blaming people now is probably a poor way to use precious resources, and there is a sense of ‘in moving forward, I wouldn’t start from here.’ Labour has to think now carefully of what exactly it is that it intends to repeal and reverse. Its fundamental problem, apart from sustainability, is to what extent the State should ‘bail out’ parts of the system which, for whatever reason, aren’t working; but this is essentially the heart of the neoliberal v socialism debate, without using such loaded language?

Shibley tweets at @legalaware.

  • Richard Bourne SHA Chair

    A very sensible summary. It is time now to move on and to continue our SHA development of policies which we will press Labour to adopt and then implement. We need more discussion of what a 21st century care system should be like and about how we get there from the mess we will inherit in 2015. The SHA has much to offer if it can move on from structures and economics and from revisting the same public v private debate over and over again.
    Having worked on this throughout I would say that amongst the Labour leadertship team there has never been the slightest ambiguity in their opposition to the Bll, Act and Regulations and there has never been the slightest muddle in their thinking – just look at the record of what they said publicly and in both Houses its totally consistent. Neither Labour, nor the SHA have ever agreed to some of the more extreme positions and explanations that have been advanced by some groups – who are entitled to their views.

  • http://legal-aware.org/ Shibley

    Yes, thanks Richard. I must agree, and I should emphasise, that it’s my honest opinion that the Labour leadership team were ***not*** muddled in their thinking (nor their colleagues in the House of Lords). Their position was entirely consistent throughout.

    I agree wholeheartedly with the rest of your comment in fact.

  • http://richardgrimes.wordpress.com Richard Grimes

    While I think that the NHS will not implode because the annulment vote was lost, I do think it is a significant signpost.

    Shibs, I do not agree with your comment “the market ‘a fair playing field’, which is of course a reasonable aspiration provided that a comprehensive NHS can be maintained for the public good”.

    I do not agree with the sentiment (which is relentlessly touted by Lib Dems) that it should not matter who delivers the care as long as it is free at the point of use. A public delivered service is very important because the market can only operate if there is easy entry and easy exit of providers: it relies on providers going bust. It is irritating if the market is for electrical white goods and your favourite (or most convenient) provider goes bust, irritating but not life threatening. When it comes to your healthcare it is far more important. I have a long term condition and I want my provider to outlive me so I have continuity of care. A private provider can *never* guarantee continuity of care because if the profit is not there, then neither will they be.

    A couple of days ago I went to see my GP and he pointed out that there was another treatment that was available but some doctors did not think it was effective and so the local hospital consultant wouldn’t offer it. He pointed out that I could see another consultant privately if I wanted this treatment. In 37 years of being treated for a long term condition, this is the first time anyone in the NHS has *ever* suggested private care to me. I was shocked.

    This is the effect of the signposts the government has given over the last three years. I think that soon it will be common for everyone to be offer one or other tier of the new healthcare system.

  • http://legal-aware.org/ Shibley

    @Richard:

    I think we’re talking at cross-purposes a little bit. I am coming from the starting point that together the Labour Party and Conservatives HAVE implemented some form of market (which I disagree with, reflected in my presence here).

    All I’m saying here that given that there is a market, if you one were to wish not to scrap it, this would mean not giving private providers any unfair advantage. I’ve explained in other blogposts why I feel the ‘Tony Blair dictum’ is incorrect

    e.g. http://www.sochealth.co.uk/2013/03/30/the-tony-blair-dictum-revisited/

    I’ve previously said that I would like Labour to legislate for providing a state-run service, which is as comprehensive and universal as we can get it. I don’t see how this, which could be called giving NHS unfair advantage, offends EU competition law at all, as it is clearly in the public interest. The reason for having this legislated for I feel is a domestic public policy one, fully consistent with subsidiarity, and parliament can essentially do what it wants hence the famous Stephens comment about blue-eyed babies

    http://www.bartleby.com/73/1040.html

    and this means implementing the NHS as originally designed. One only has to go across the pond to see how disastrous the management of long-term conditions such as diabetes, which has significant medical complications, including neuropathy, nephropathy and retinopathy, can be.

  • Matthew Prior

    Excellent piece Shibley, but yes we should now move on. What is the future for the NHS? Can government do much more without structural reorganisation or tweaking the budget?

  • Jos Bell

    I fear that not only have Shirely and Clement-Jones managed to coerce and confuse the eminent Lord Walton, who chose to ignore his large sheaf of correspondence, including from not only the RCGPs but even the BMA of which he was previously chair – but it looks as though they have also worked the same effect on a wider audience. As Lord Phil Hunt and Lord Owen showed – the matter is in fact very clear : leave these regs intact and CCGs will behave in a defensive way which does not look after patient interest, but instead protect themselves from legal action in line with External Market EU Competition Law. Ispso facto – they will put services out to tender which would otherwise have stayed firmly with the NHS.

    Over and over the Lib Dems and then Howe said that they had put the the EU Law impact (without really naming it as such) firmly back to 2010. Bizarrely, they kept speaking as though the H&SC Act had never happened. This is completely disingenuous – however too many Cross Benchers swallowed it, or were simply too confused to vote on it. We all know what the Lib Dems did.

    The day was deliberately cluttered with odds and sods matters by the govt – including a debate on whether to have a Debating Committee (!) to squeeze this Pray Debate up to the end of the day and tip out the older frail Labour nobles who don’t have a Pimlico posh-pad to pop back to.

    This was Lord Phil’s fatal motion – a well-thought out attempt to turn the tide, however the fatality was sadly not to Section 75 measures but to the NHS at hands of the craven Lib Dems. The overall impact was something akin to a terminal cancer patient being offered a nitrate injection.

    As for silent Adam Clifford – oh no, not at all. You clearly haven’t been listening to anything other than the BBC.

    • Jos Bell

      Surely that should be Shirley do I hear you say? indeed it is she of the tarnished pearls…

      • http://www.shibleyrahman.com shibley

        haha Jos – I’m still confused how Lord Walton of Detchant ended up being so unperturbed by these Regs, given that a large number of eminent bodies had warned against them. But he did seem convincing.

        I found Lord Clement-Jones’ criticism of David Lock QC highly personal:

        “In contrast, the QC who had been relied on by 38 Degrees to give objective legal advice is quoted as saying:

        “These Regulations play fast and loose with the NHS by turning it into a giant experiment for those committed to a certain right wing ideology”.

        By no stretch of the imagination is that true, and it casts significant doubt on the quality of his opinion. Is it not highly significant that that same QC in all his legal advice, chose not to compare these regulations with Labour’s guidance? That casts doubt on the whole of the 38 Degrees campaign.”

        I wonder what DLA Piper thought of that?

        http://www.dlapiper.com/tim_clement-jones/

        • Jos Bell

          Lord Walton was obviously convinced by Shirley – given their shared wink afterwards. I was not convinced but amazed by him – he seemed to set more store by Shirl and Freddie Howe’s impeccable manners than by what they actually said and completely failed to take stock of the actual evidence.

        • Jos Bell

          PS C-J is a spinner and there will shortly be a legal statement forthcoming to demonstrate the fact

        • Jos Bell

          well how fascinating – it seems that after all, the reasons so many EU countries manage to circumnavigate all this is because ‘the relevant EU Directive 2004/18 very substantially does not apply to public contracts for health and social care.’ So that being the case – why on earth would the government see fit to introduce measures which enforce the very same thing into our own NHS practice – and fib about it…… http://nhsrationing.org/2013/04/27/did-earl-howe-get-any-part-of-procurement-law-right/ I imagine your privatisation guess is as good as mine…..

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