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Editor's Blog

Editor’s blog Wednesday 24 March 2010: Hurrah! The NHS and DH are going to make £4.35 billion worth of fictional savings

Publish Date/Time: 
03/24/2010 - 18:06

You could not make this shit up - truly.

The Magical Money Tree Where Cash Grows For Free has evidently been grafted onto the Japanese Knotweed Bullshit Plant to produce this exciting new hybrid.

Biology trumps economics every time.

(Sigh) OK. Here we go.

These entirely fictional saving of £4.35 billion will not be achieved by the NHS and the DH. They will not be made through the following brilliant and failsafe schemes:

Editor’s blog Wednesday 24 March 2010: Budget, Bundred, productivity down again and commissioning chaos

Publish Date/Time: 
03/24/2010 - 15:05

Morning (as in afternoon). You'll have seen the latest Maynard Doctrine on boomerang health policy. If not, do so now and then come back here.

Oo-kay. So nothing from darling Chancellor Darling about the efficiency savings (indeed, they’ll be funding free social care, so long as you don’t actually need any).

And Cameron’s response was basically ‘vote Conservative’. Hey-ho.

Editor’s blog Tuesday 23 March 2010: Ex-Audit Commission boss to Monitor; Moyes and Corrigan on NHS reform

Publish Date/Time: 
03/23/2010 - 15:29

Hello. This week may be more than a bit sketchy. You know what I mean, 'Arry?

Yes, you do.

Anyway. Steve Bundred, apparently.

Monitor’s new chair.

Who wrote this about financial cutbacks in The Times last February.

And this in The Observer last June.

Editor’s blog Monday 22 March 2010: US reforms; Blairites rumbled; NPfIT in bits; and Tories to keep everything open

Publish Date/Time: 
03/22/2010 - 22:58

They’ve done it. It’s watered-down, and not perfect. It does very little to really address the causes of cost-inflation, let alone the crucial issue of tort reform. It is going to cost them something in the November mid-term elections.

But the US has – just - got its health bill past Senate.

Editor’s blog Friday 19 March 2010: The right kind of variation, and a leak on Labour's social care policy

Publish Date/Time: 
03/19/2010 - 13:55

Hello. Just a very quick one today, as time is very tight. The FT reports that shadow chancellor George Osborne accepts that there will be greater variation in public services under a Conservative government.

That’s nice. Tomorrow he may admit to the existence of gravity. On Sunday, we may hear that the Earth is round.

Editor’s blog Thursday 18 March 2010: Less public debt, and a slightly opaque interim report from the 2020 Public Services Trust

Publish Date/Time: 
03/18/2010 - 12:10

Good morning. I may be a little off-form today, owing to the sad news of the death of Alex Chilton.

Chilton was a great, if commercially unappreciated, US singer and songwriter. If you’ve never heard his music, particularly Big Star, do so now: you’re going to get something great in your life if you do. (Just avoid anything he recorded since about 1990).

Editor’s blog Wednesday 16 March 2010: CQC blows the bloody doors off; and Reform shuts 32,000 hospital beds

Publish Date/Time: 
03/17/2010 - 16:42

How do? CQC's latest staff survey is out. There will be some nuggets in here - I may even get to finding a few.

Editor’s blog Tuesday 16 March 2010: Winding up Telegraph NHS debate, and other bits and bobs

Publish Date/Time: 
03/16/2010 - 17:10

Hello. I didn't get round to washing up the remaining articles from last week's Telegraph series on the NHS, and shall now do so quickly.

The quality of these overall varied widely, but many took a reasonable stab at getting some of the issues into the arena of public attention. The Telegraph deserve some credit for that.

Editor’s blog Monday 15 March 2010: New report on PROMS from Kings Fund & OHE

Publish Date/Time: 
03/16/2010 - 11:22

Morning. The new report out from the Kings Fund and the Office of Health Economics is worth reading. Getting the most out of PROMs: putting health outcomes at the heart of NHS decision-making by Nancy Devlin and the iridescent John Appleby.

BUPA director Andrew Vallance-Owen’s introduction wryly notes that the traditional NHS outcome measure – of death – is of no help in assessing whether the healthcare the NHS provides adds value.

Editor's blog Friday 12th March 2010: Hey, big pensions! NAO, NAO, NAO!

Publish Date/Time: 
03/12/2010 - 02:36

Wow.

I knew it was a lot of money, but even so ....

In hard figures (found here), this means:

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