Click to listen highlighted text! Powered By GSpeech

Home » Labour » Care at the crossroads. Burnham has something big, and you may be quite pleased to see him

Care at the crossroads. Burnham has something big, and you may be quite pleased to see him



Social care funding is on its knees.

Andy Burnham MP, Shadow Secretary of State for Health, addressed a sympathetic audience at the #NHSConfed2014 yesterday, talking about unlocking resources for general medicine.

We live in crazy times. Newark saw the christening of the Conservative Party as the protest party you should vote if you wanted to STOP UKIP. But let me take you back to an era when the Labour Party had principles (!)  In August 1945, Aneurin Bevan was made Minster for Health following the 1945 General Election. The National Health Service (NHS) was one of the major achievements of Clement Attlee’s Labour government. By July 1948, Minister for Health, Aneurin Bevan had helped guide the National Health Service Act through Parliament.

A full day has been allocated to the Opposition health on Monday in parliament in part of their discussions on her Majesty’s Gracious Speech. Simon Stevens – NHS England’s new chief – has asked for solutions for well rehearsed issues, and Andy Burnham is clear that this is no time for another apprentice like Jeremy Hunt. Whilst being upbeat about the future of the health and social care system, he wants to move away from a “malnourished system”, with carers employed on zero hours contracts and less than the minimum wage. Indeed, this is a serious issue which has caused me some considerably anxiety too. A “product of [my] time in Government”, clearly this framework has also benefited from a parliamentary term in opposition.

Burnham crucially identifies not an inefficiency in which money is spent (although the ongoing Nicholson savings rumble on). But he does identify an inefficiency in outcomes (such as the near-inevitable fractured neck of the femur in the leg for a seemingly-trivial cost-saving in not purchasing a grab handrail). Labour, inevitably, though has an uphill battle now. The system appears to encourage the medical model of care, according to Burnham, encourages hospitalisation of people, so it is not simply a question of throwing money at the service. People are more than aware that an ‘unsustainable NHS’ is in a nutshell code for a NHS starved of adequate fundings.

Burnham feels that you can’t half-believe in ‘integration’, and is mollified about the consensus about a need for integration across all main political parties.

“I am really worried that the ‘Better Care Fund‘ might give integration a bad name”, comments Burnham.

People who have watching Burnham’s comments will note how Burnham has openly commented how he feels he has been misled by certain think-tanks in the past. A period of opposition has enabled Burnham conversely to obtain a crisis of insight. And yet he talks about his “precious moment” in order “to build a consensus of shared endeavour, which I intend to use to the full and very carefully.” Intriguingly, he does not wish to ‘foist a grand plan’ on voters after the next general election. This is of course is political speak for his ‘shared agenda’, driving a cultural change by stakeholders within the system. This is precisely what Burnham feels he has achieved through the commission on whole person care by Sir John Oldham.

“Not a medical or a treatment model, but a truly preventative service, that can at last aspire to give people a state of physical, mental and social wellbeing.”

Burnham wants to put a stop to the ‘random set of disconnected meetings with individuals within the service.’

An exercise was carried out at the start of the NHS.

This is the famous leaflet.

Pages from the first leaflet introducing NHS to British Public in 1948.

Burnham desires a new leaflet from an incoming Labour government to introduce how social care can become under the umbrella of the National Health Service.

“Going forward, you should expect to receive much more support in your home. The NHS will work to assemble one team to look after you covering all the needs you have. We want to build a personal solution that works for you, for your family, and for your carers, because if we get right at the very outset and the very beginning it’s more likely to work for you and give you what you want, and cost us all much less. We want you to have one point of contact for the co-ordination of your care. We know you are fed up with telling the same story to everyone who comes through the door. It’s frustrating for you, and wasteful for us. To get the care that you’re entitled to, when and where you want it, you will have powerful new rights set out in the NHS Constitution such as the right to a single point of contact for the coordination of all of your care and a personalised care plan that you have signed off. But – and there is a big but – to make of all this happen, you will changes in your local NHS, and, in particular, you will changes in your local hospital. We can do a better job of supporting you where you want to be, we won’t need to carry out as much treatment in hospitals, or have as many hospital beds. It is only by allowing the NHS to make this kind of change to move from hospital to home that we will all secure it for the rest of this century.”

Burnham feels that the NHS must be the ‘preferred provider’ and the DGH should be allowed to reinvent itself - building the notion of one team around the person. I personally have formed the opinion: “close smaller hospitals at haste, and repent at leisure“. Critics of marketisation will inevitably point out the blindingly obvious: that even with a NHS preferred provider, there’s still a market, and nothing short of abolition of the purchaser-provider split will remedy the faultlines. There could be a one person tariff or one person budget for a person for a year. It would give an acute trust a much more stable platform, according to Burnham, in contradistinction to the activity based tariff. This does require some rejigging of how we have the proper financial performance management system in place: there should be a drive, I feel, for rewarding behaviours in the system that promote good health rather than rewarding disproportionately the work necessary to deal with failures of good control, such as dialysis, amputations or laser treatment.

Burnham is clearly inspired by the ‘Future Hospitals’ soundings from the Royal Colleges of Physicians, focused on a new generation of generalist doctors working across boundaries of primary and secondary care:

“Since its inception, the NHS has had to adapt to reconcile the changing needs of patients with advances in medical science. Change and the evolution of services is the backbone of the NHS. Hospitals need to meet the requirements of their local population, while providing specialised services to a much larger geographical catchment area.”

Burnham even talks about possibly reviewing the “independent contractor” status of GPs.

Centralised care is mooted for people in life threatening situations. But Burnham has found that barriers to service reconfiguration exist through the current competition régime and market, with integration encouraging in contrast to collaboration, people before profit, and merge “without the nonsense of competition lawyers looking over their shoulders”. Therefore, Burnham repeats his pledge to remove the Health and Social Care Act (2012), which has driven “fragmentation, complexity and greater cost”. Under this construct, section 75 and its associated Regulations is disabling rather than enabling for health policy. There is clearly much work to be done here to make the legislation fit for purpose, as indeed I have discussed previously. Wider dangers are at play, as Burnham well knows, however. Here he is speaking about his opposition to TTIP (the EU-US Free Trade Treaty) which the BBC News did not seed fit to cover despite their Charter requirements for public broadcasting. And here is George Eaton writing about his opposition to TTIP in the New Statesman.

Burnham is clearly, to me, positioning himself to the left, distancing himself from previous Labour administrations. There are clearly budgets in the system somewhere, and while Burnham talks about unified budgets he does not put the emphasis on personal budgets. There is no doubt to me that personal budgets can never be ‘compulsory’, and each person group (e.g. people living with dementia) presents with unique challenges. It’s clear to me that deep down Andy Burnham is still in principle keen on something like the ‘National Care Service’, in preference to any gimmicks from the Cabinet Office. Burnham in the Q/A session with Anita Anand indeed describes how this had been thrown into the long grass at the time of Labour losing the general election in 2010, but how paying for social care in 2014 is as fundamentally unfair as paying for medicine had been pre-NHS according to Burnham. This would take some time to put in place, such as a mechanism for a mandatory insurance system, and a proper care coordinator infrastructure. And these are not without their own controversies. But, with Miliband playing safe one unintended consequence for neoliberal fanatics has been that it has not been possible to impose a strong neoliberal thrust to whole person care; and whatever Miliband’s personal preferences, the pendulum to me is definitely swinging to the left. Burnham talks specifically about a well planned social care system as part of the NHS.

And so Burnham looks genuinely burnt by previous administrations, and, whilst certain key players will want personal budgets and competition to be playing a greater part in policy, it appears to me that the current mood music is for Labour not appearing to promote privatisation of the NHS in any form.  The ultimate success of the next Labour administration will be determined by the clout of the Chancellor of Exchequer, whoever that is. It could yet be Ed Balls. For matters such as ‘purse strings’ on the social impact value bond or the private finance initiative, Burnham may have to slog out painful issues with Balls in the way that Aneurin Bevan once did with Ernie Bevin in a previous Labour existence. Burnham’s problem is ensuring continuity with the current system where services have been proactively pimped out to the private sector, but ultimately it is the general public who call the shots. Burnham knows he’s onto something big, and, for once, some people may be quite pleased to see him.

 

@legalaware

  • http://gravatar.com/rnfrancisfrancis rnfrancisfrancisRobert

    Whether the NHS was a major achievement of Clement Atlee’s govt. post 1945 is very debatable. It squandered huge amounts of the general public’s money on unecessary dental services for one. Gordon Brown’s ludicrous efforts to get re-elected recently were a copy of those thoughtless, ignorant actions of Bevan.

  • http://legal-aware.org/ Shibley Rahman

    Thanks

  • http://twitter.com/mjh0421 Mervyn Hyde (@mjh0421)

    Another Brilliant article Shibley.

    I would concurr totally with the statement “Preferred provider” is absolutely no different to any other description of a market oriented system.

    Markets are designed to produce high profits and have nothing to do with health care delivery. How for example does the market distinguish between the needs of a cancer patient and the treatment necessary to cure heart disease.

    Andy Burnham also let the cat out of the bag in referring to commissioning hospital care, This to me is just code; that his whole person care is just using bodies like the CCGs and Councils as a means to outsource services and to continue the expensive tendering process that has increased costs on the health service not reduced it.

    Sadly again I think Andy Burnham is being disingenuous when he said he wanted to confront head on the problems facing the NHS, all he talked about was being faced with very difficult funding decisions and how best to deliver a modern service, forgetting to mention that we have been using these same methods now for over forty years and reduction in service provision has been the only consequence.

    I have on many occasions provided information that proves that a country does not operate on the same level as household and talks of Budgets are not relevant.

    The money is there without impediment, what we lack is a government honest enough to admit it. Japan is already doing it, how on earth could they fund the clean up operation and maintain their economy if they didn’t?
    http://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2013/jan/22/shinzo-abe-quantitative-easing-japan

    The real truth is we do not need QE to achieve the same objective we merely need to print what we need, as the Bank of England is the issuer of our currency, unlike those in Europe.

    Britain does not have a deficit problem and any politician that tells you otherwise is lying to you. Just look at Shinso Abe.

    We have the money so lets start employing all those people we need to run our public services.

    This exercise that politicians are pursuing at present is the asset stripping of our state and the privatisation of public services.

    • Nicholas

      Absolutely. You have to read what he is not directly discussing in the apparently meaningless things he says. “Commissioning” is one of them, and of course means continuing to sell off our health service to pirates.

      Nicholas.

  • http://legal-aware.org/ Shibley Rahman

    Thanks as ever Mervyn.

  • Nicholas

    “People who have watching Burnham’s comments will note how Burnham has openly commented how he feels he has been misled by certain think-tanks in the past.”

    He “openly comments” and then openly continues to make policy with privateers from the King’s Fund. Judging people/politicians on their actions is surely rule no.1?

    • Nicholas

      I mean really, poor innocent ikkle thing. He was “misled”. What kind of an infernal idiot would believe, I mean actually believe that cutting twenty BILLION pounds from a health service (at McKinsey and Co’s bidding) was actually a nice thing to do?

      I suppose those bankers currently devastating Europe are all doing it because they think it is a kindness.

  • http://legal-aware.org/ Shibley Rahman

    Thanks Nicholas. I share your pain.

  • Prue Plumridge

    If Andy Burnham would commit to removing the internal market and the purchaser provider split rather than removing enforced competition and the restoration of the Secretary of State’s duty to PROVIDE services rather than guarantee as currently to be found in the Labour Agenda 2015 document then I think that he would have made a real step forward. As it is it would still leave the NHS open to continuing privatisation and under threat of competition law.

  • http://legal-aware.org/ Shibley Rahman

    Really important comment. Thanks Prue.

  • Prue Plumridge

    You may like to know that our CLP and two others I persuaded have made amendments to that effect in Labour’s Agenda 2015 policy document. That is remove the word ‘guaranteed’ and replace with ‘provide’ and replace ‘removes enforced competition’ with ‘removes the internal market and the purchaser provider split’. I have read the SHA’s response to AGENDA 2015 on Health and Care – very comprehensive and it is good to see that people are working on the same lines.

  • http://legal-aware.org/ Shibley Rahman

    Very interesting Prue once again.

  • http://vicmart009.wordpress.com Methusalada

    I like the philosophy & integrity of Andy Burnham . He & I know that their is no magic bullet in preserving the NHSC. Pity he is not the Leader of the Labour Party alas I doubt if I shall be around then , but I wish him well .

  • A A A
  • Click to listen highlighted text! Powered By GSpeech