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Editor's Blog

Editor's blog Tuesday 9 November 2010: What is Francis II going to do?

Publish Date/Time: 
11/09/2010 - 23:35

Yesterday was the opening day of the promised Francis Inquiry Two: This Time, It’s Public. As with all sequel or remake, the inevitable first question is, will it be any better than the original?

Editor's blog Monday 8 November 2010: The virtues of transparency from the Coalition Government

Publish Date/Time: 
11/08/2010 - 19:19

There is a nice line in one episode of Yes Minister about a paper on 'Open Government' - you get rid of the difficult bit in the title, and then don't have to mention it again.

Editor's blog Monday 8 November 2010: Wellards conference quotes - White Paper reforms, NICE work and known unknowns

Publish Date/Time: 
11/08/2010 - 16:28

Last Wednesday saw the third Wellards annual conference. I went along.

It's an interesting event: Wellards provide information on the NHS, targeted at the pharmaceutical industry - and COI declaration: I do bits and pieces of consultancy and editorial work for them.

At last year's conference, DH primary care czar Dr David Colin-Thome made his infamous remark that "the corpse (of GP practice-based commissioning) is not for resuscitation".

Editor's blog Friday 5 November 2010: EXCLUSIVE - DH cancer czar: national cancer drugs fund not best use of £200 million

Publish Date/Time: 
11/05/2010 - 09:33

The cultural logic is appropriate that in an NHS broadly run along Soviet (if not Stalinist) lines of centralised command-and control, you would have czars somewhere in the mix as a nod to the imperial past.

The Department of Health has a plethora of czars in its crown. Prominent among them is its cancer czar Professor Mike Richards, who was given the hospital pass of doing a report to justify increased spending on expensive cancer drugs. Which he did.

Editor's blog Thursday 4 November 2010: Earl Howe fails to answer the real questions on NICE's future

Publish Date/Time: 
11/04/2010 - 10:30

Thank you to Dave West of Health Service Journal for drawing attention on Twitter to Earl Howe's answers to questions in the Lords on the proposed changes to NICE.

At the top of the debate, you find that Baroness Sherlock asked Earl Howe, "To ask Her Majesty's Government which groups were consulted prior to the announcement that the National Institute for Health and Clinical Excellence was to lose the power to decide that some drugs may not be supplied by the National Health Service".

Editor's blog Wednesday 3 November 2010: A NICE surprise

Publish Date/Time: 
11/03/2010 - 15:44

The email below, sent by NICE chief executive Sir Andrew Dillon to NICE committee members, reveals clearly that the government's pronouncements and particular emphasis on changes to their role took NICE themselves by surprise.

What a vote of confidence in NICE by the Government.

EMAIL TEXT BEGINS:
Dear Committee Member,

Editor's blog Tuesday 2 November 2010: Interesting times in Parliament

Publish Date/Time: 
11/02/2010 - 20:11

Today was an interesting day in parliament. In the morning, the increasingly promising health select committee took its second evidence session on commissioning. In the afternoon, the new opposition health team had their first go at health questions.

What, then, did we learn?

From the commissioning evidence session, Dr Richard Vautrey of the BMA re-emphasised that the bulk of future commissioning will be done by "lay managers", criticising the poverty of central efforts to create clear messages for good managers in retention.

Editor's blog Tuesday 2 November 2010: NICE, pharmafunding, fairness and responsibility

Publish Date/Time: 
11/02/2010 - 12:51

You've probably noticed that we've been keeping an eye on NICE issues: so have others.

This excellent blog post from 'Gimpy' elucidates the relationship between Big Pharma and the funding of the Rarer Cancers Foundation.

Editor's blog Monday 1 November 2010: Nights of drawing in

Publish Date/Time: 
11/01/2010 - 18:15

My grandmother was a world-class fatalist. One of her many endearing habits of form was to stare out of the window on a darkening evening, and intone, "ah, the nights are drawing in".

Celtic melancholy to the power of ten ... whose impact was only slightly blunted by her tendency to start doing this almost immediately after the midsummer solstice. It doesn't really work in early July.

And now it is November, and the nights really are drawing in.

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