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  Bring accountable care out of 
  shadows
  15 December 2017
  The war over the future of the NHS is being fought on multiple 
  fronts. Campaigners, the Labour party, the government, NHS 
  England and even Stephen Hawking are locked in combat over 
  the structure, funding, transparency, accountability and legality 
  of the current wave of reforms, along with the never-ending 
  fight about privatisation – real or imagined.
  The famous physicist has joined campaigners in a high court 
  bid to block the introduction of accountable care organisations 
  to oversee local services without primary legislation, arguing 
  they could lead to privatisation, rationing and charging.
  Meanwhile, the shadow health secretary, Jon Ashworth, has 
  tabled a Commons early day motion after the government 
  announced plans to amend regulations to support the operation 
  of accountable care organisations. Ashworth argues that they 
  are a profound change to the NHS that should be debated in 
  parliament.
  Accountable care – a term imported from the US, where it 
  plays a key role in Obamacare – can take many forms, but it 
  typically involves an alliance of providers with a fixed budget 
  collaborating to manage the health needs of their local 
  population. NHS England wants to see sustainability and 
  transformation partnerships (STPs) evolving into accountable 
  care systems in which integrated care supports good physical 
  and mental health.
  Read the full article at the Guardian Healthcare Network
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  Patients and staff pay negligence 
  price 
  1 December 2017
  This week I met a man about to launch a legal action for 
  negligence against the hospital where his wife and son almost 
  died during childbirth. Two years later, she is still recovering 
  and waiting for answers as to what went wrong. Exhausted by 
  months of obstruction and denial, they believe going to court is 
  the only way they will get an admission that mistakes were 
  made. They don’t want money, just an apology and assurance 
  that no one else will have to suffer as they did.
  This entirely avoidable melodrama is being played out across 
  the NHS. Friday’s report by the public accounts committee into 
  the cost of clinical negligence in hospital trusts reveals that the 
  bill has quadrupled in 10 years to £1.6bn and is expected to 
  double again by 2021.
  That would mean more than £3bn wasted on negligence costs 
  in a single year, amounting to roughly 4% of trusts’ income.
  The rising costs are driven by two factors. As well as increasing 
  damages for a small and stable number of “high value”, mostly 
  maternity-related claims – which account for 83% of the 
  damages awarded – there is a growth in the number and cost 
  of “low value” claims. 
  Read the full article at the Guardian Healthcare Network
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  GPs need to lead health tech 
  revolution
  21 November 2017
  The launch of the GP at Hand app-based primary care service 
  in London has been met with accusations that it is damaging 
  the NHS.
  The service is being run by a practice in Fulham, but people 
  across central London are able to move their GP registration 
  there. It offers video consultations 24/7 and face to face 
  appointments at five clinics so far. It uses technology provided 
  by Babylon Health, which bills itself as “the world’s first AI-
  driven healthcare service”.
  GP at Hand has been accused of trying to make an easy profit 
  by avoiding the patients who create the most work, threatening 
  the viability of other practices. There have also been concerns 
  that app-based GP services could pull lots of healthy people 
  into the primary care system at the expense of those who really 
  need it.
  The recent annual conference of England’s local medical 
  committees opposed the rollout of online consulting until there 
  was “clear evidence” of the benefit to patients.
  The biggest problem with the service is the long list of people 
  who are discouraged from signing on. The website says it may 
  be “less appropriate” for 10 categories of patients, which can 
  reasonably be summarised as people who are, or are likely to 
  be, sick or pregnant. 
  Read the full article at the Guardian Healthcare Network
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  How to put citizens at the heart of 
  NHS
  3 November 2017
  With ever-growing pressures from funding, staff shortages, 
  demand and targets, is it possible to bring joy back to the 
  healthcare workforce and put patients at the centre of their 
  care? A group of healthcare leaders think it is.
  Frustrated by the difficulties of getting back to what really 
  matters in healthcare but convinced there was a way forward, 
  two dozen people from health and social care got together as 
  the Industry Coalition Group to get some fresh thinking into 
  discussions around NHS reform. Healthcare at Home put some 
  funding in and brought the group together; Mike Bell, chair of 
  Croydon health services NHS trust, led the discussions, and 
  the result was the 2,000 Days Project, launched at the King’s 
  Fund and Cambridge Health Network this week. In the spirit of 
  full disclosure, I should add that I wrote the report.
  The 2,000 days refers to the first and last 1,000 days of our 
  lives. Maternity and infancy profoundly affect our life chances 
  and lifetime consumption of healthcare. Giving every child a 
  strong start is morally right, economic common sense and good 
  for the NHS.
  The last 1,000 days crystallise the issues of choice and 
  empowerment; how care can maximise the quality of life, rather 
  than simply its length, and how to get the most value from 
  healthcare resources.
  Read the full article at the Guardian Healthcare Network
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  Blows fly over children’s mental 
  health
  20 October 2017
  The mauling of NHS England chief executive Simon Stevens 
  by children’s commissioner Anne Longfield over mental health 
  services is a rare example of brutal disputes between officials 
  breaking out in public.
  The children’s commissioner for England, a post created in 
  2004, exists to stand up for the rights of children, particularly on 
  issues affecting the most vulnerable.
  It is certainly not part of the remit to make the NHS, or any 
  other part of the state, feel comfortable about what they do for 
  children.
  Longfield’s bust-up with Stevens began when she sent a 
  briefing to MPs ahead of World Mental Health Day on 10 
  October. The brief is a coruscating critique of children’s mental 
  health provision, describing it as bleak and shocking, 
  particularly in comparison with adult mental health care.
  The thrust of her argument was that help only reaches around 
  a fifth of children with a mental health condition, while a failure 
  to intervene early means scarce resources are being drained 
  away on expensive in-patient care which benefits few children. 
  A failure to prioritise children’s mental health means most local 
  areas are failing to meet NHS standards for improving services 
  or providing crisis support.
  Read the full article at the Guardian Healthcare Network
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  NHS is getting desperate as 
  winter nears
  6 October 2017
  As the NHS careers towards winter, signs of desperation can 
  be seen across the country.
  Since the summer, at least six hospital trusts and two 
  ambulance services have been dealing with allegations of 
  bullying. Two chief executives have been forced out for failing 
  to hit the A&E target. More might follow.
  Local government is getting another beating over the growing 
  problems around moving older people out of hospital after 
  treatment. The Health Service Journal says the Department of 
  Health is threatening to direct how social care funding is used 
  at councils with the worst records for delaying transfers of care.
  The bed days lost each month to delayed transfers hover close 
  to 200,000. Most are caused by the NHS, although social 
  care’s total has been growing faster. Hospitals have entire 
  wards of people trying to get home.
  Lest any chief executives might have forgotten that A&E is a 
  priority, recently appointed chief inspector of hospitals, Prof Ted 
  Baker, has sent everyone a handy guide on what they should 
  be doing. It is important to “know whether each patient has a 
  serious problem”, apparently.
  More helpfully, Baker also stresses the importance of 
  empathetic leadership and managing staff wellbeing. But does 
  that mean a consultant in A&E who breaches the four-hour wait 
  target after sending exhausted staff home will be supported, or 
  will their chief executive be put in front of the next NHS 
  Improvement firing squad?
  Read the full article at the Guardian Healthcare Network
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  Public Policy Media 
  Richard Vize