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Editor's Blog | Health Policy Insight
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Editor's Blog

Editor’s blog Tuesday 21 September 2010: Public health redundancies

Publish Date/Time: 
09/21/2010 - 16:21

The report in The Guardian that the DH has started to shed public health staff is of course an entrant in the Holy Order of Things That Are Not Surprising.

The likely 1,500 redundancies that will ensure are jobs associated with 'programme funding' – budgets to fund particular areas of work which the government has decided to abolish by March 2011. In context, the article suggests that the DH currently employs 4,286 people.

Editor’s blog Monday 20 September 2010: Deputy PM Clegg's masochism strategy

Publish Date/Time: 
09/20/2010 - 15:58

You know the old gag about the masochist and the sadist. Yes, you do.

'Beat me', begs the masochist. 'No', replies the sadist.

And you remember Tony 'Jazz Hands' Blair's masochism strategy - he would stay in TV studios for ages, trying to argue opponents of the Iraq invasion round to see his point of view. The Catholic sacrament of confession, maybe? Catholics do the oddest things. Ask Opus Dei.

Editor’s blog Monday 20 September 2010: NHS Confederation Policy Salon: what will happen in a liberated NHS?

Publish Date/Time: 
09/20/2010 - 15:25

The inaugural NHS Confederation policy salon of the new season took its cue from Glenn Hoddle’s mantra “I’ve never made predictions and I never will”, seeking to discern how things will look in 2013. What will liberation look like?

General context-setting suggested that while the White Paper has adequately mapped the anatomy of the new system, its physiology remains an unknown. Potential conflicts appear on considering various implicit assumptions which underpin the thinking behind the White Paper.

Editor’s blog Monday 20 September 2010: Sorting out the problem of NHS staff out-earning the Prime Minister

Publish Date/Time: 
09/20/2010 - 12:57

Tonight's BBC Panorama investigation, in collaboration with the Bureau For Investigative Journalism, has revealed that people who work in the public sector can earn more than the Prime Minister.

This is not a surprise to seasoned watchers of the public sector. Nor indeed to readers of the Daily Mail.

Rather, it is an illuminated Psalm in the Book Of Things That Are Not Surprising.

Editor’s blog Monday 20 September 2010: Cuts, nuts and sledgehammers

Publish Date/Time: 
09/20/2010 - 07:28

Good morning. Welcome to another week of health policy mayhem.

Cuts in public services – what the state does nationally and locally – have a win-lose-lose effect.

The Treasury wins, as it always will in the end.

The people who receive the service lose, obviously - very few public services are created which benefit no member of the public, however indirectly.

And the providers of the service, be they public, not-for-profit or private sector (and of services to the service – mainly private) lose – be it their job, contract or business.

Guest editorial Sunday 19 September 2010: Matthew Swindells on the future of the National Programme for IT

Publish Date/Time: 
09/19/2010 - 16:44

Professor Matthew Swindells, health chair of the British Computer Society, former DH chief information officer and soon to start work with Cerner, assesses the context and consequences of the latest news on NHS Connecting For Health

Editor’s blog Sunday 19 September 2010: Closing down The Ministry

Publish Date/Time: 
09/19/2010 - 09:25

Today's Observer depicts a bleak-looking future for Jamie Oliver's Ministry Of Food project in Rotherham.

You may remember the Channel 4 'Ministry Of Food' TV series: Oliver's ongoing efforts to bring about local philanthropic social reform (no, I'm not taking the mick here) tried to bring a culture of cooking to a deprived region via the 'pass it on' approach.

Editor’s blog Friday 17 September 2010: Lansley on GP commissioning consortia: bureaucracy, inherited debt, NHS pensions

Publish Date/Time: 
09/17/2010 - 17:25

Good evening.

You may have already seen the new instalment of Maynard Doctrine, in which the good Professor points to the pointlessness of NHS reorganisations. This piece may have been prompted in part by Professor Chris Ham’s musings for the BMJ that the White Paper reforms may not even be enacted as planned.

Interesting times.

Editor’s blog Thursday 16 September 2010: The Proms are over: long live PROMs

Publish Date/Time: 
09/16/2010 - 21:30

The Proms - the Promenade Concerts - are one of the UK's great cultural institutions. 2010 saw another great season.

PROMs - patient-reported outcome measures - are one of the UK's great cultural innovations. 2010 sees the publications of the first figures for the NHS in England, but results were mixed.

Guest editorial Thurssday 16 September 2010: The strange case of the Bristol Histopathology Mystery

Publish Date/Time: 
09/16/2010 - 16:45

Editor’s note: - Today’s guest editorial is by Daphne Havercroft, who has been campaigning to ensure that the reconfiguration of pathology services in Bristol meets required legal and clinical standards.

Daphne has drawn together a timeline, which shows that the offical narrative regarding events relating to pathology reconfiguration and misdiagnosis in Bristol is contradictory, incomplete and misleading.

This material appeared first on Dr Phil Hammond’s website.

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