So, where has all the money gone?
Here’s some of it;
Gone to profitable private companies siphoning off money from
the NHS using NHS Consultants and Doctors moonlighting to do private work.
Nurses working for agencies after or before their shift and then too tired to
do the work they are paid to do by the NHS.
Here’s a Guardian report of an analysis by the respected
Nuffield Trust – mind you Nuffield is a ‘charitable’ Trust which operates
private hospitals, largely staffed by NHS staff. ‘Charitable’ doesn’t mean that
it’s a ‘charity’ as most people would understand it – benefiting the poor.
Private health care providers actually benefit the wealthy and the medical
staff who use their facilities.
I’m the only one you can really trust.
Randeep
Ramesh, social affairs editor
The
Guardian, Wednesday 22 May 2013
The report
says there has been a rapid rise in the share of NHS-funded patients treated by
private providers.
Spending on
private services by the NHS reached a record £8.7bn last year, a jump of more
than £3bn since 2006, according to research.
A study by
the Nuffield Trust and the Institute of Fiscal Studies reveals that the role of
non-NHS providers in delivering NHS-funded care in England has increased
dramatically from 2006, with the result that in certain areas of healthcare the
independent sector is now a fixture in the NHS.
The report
gives as an example the proportion of hip and knee replacements delivered by
private companies and funded by the NHS, which rose from "negligible"
in 2003 to a fifth of all such operations today.
The report
says choice and competition were embedded into the NHS in 2008 with a
significant effect on local hospitals. It says a study last year into three key
elective procedures – including hernia operations and hip replacements – found
that "there has been a rapid rise in the share of NHS-funded patients
treated by private providers, matched by a corresponding fall in the proportion
of patients treated by their nearest NHS acute trust".
Spending
varied across the regions. In Yorkshire and Humberside, almost 10% of all NHS
funds were being used to pay private companies for patient treatment. In the
north-east the figure was 4%.The extra cash has helped to protect private
healthcare providers from the economic downturn. The report says the revenues
of private hospitals over the past five years would have been lower without
demand from the NHS – especially given that between 2008 and 2011 private
spending on health fell by almost 6% in real terms.
While
Labour continued to lavish cash on the NHS – public spending on healthcare in
the UK increased in both 2008 and 2009 – the authors say the economic crisis
has introduced cuts into the health service. Despite coalition promises to
ringfence the NHS budget, the report says spending on health "fell in real
terms by 0.7% in 2010 and a further 1.2% in 2011".
Anita
Charlesworth, Nuffield Trust chief economist and an author of the report, said
it was an open question as to whether public funding of the private sector
could continue growing. The government's policy is to extend "market
reforms" into new parts of the health service.
"Whether
spending on private providers will continue to increase as NHS spending is
essentially frozen is less clear," Charlesworth said. "There is a
need to monitor whether the planned extension of choice into community services
leads to an increased involvement of the voluntary sector or whether in
response the private sector providers also expand into this area."
To recap;
It’s a recession, so people are spending less on private
healthcare, so the private sector has capacity to spare.
Public money going to the NHS has fallen in real terms
despite what the government says.
Public money is being diverted to private hospitals.
NHS hospitals are losing ‘business’ and going bust.
We have to pick up the tab.
Neil Harris
(a don’t stop till you drop production)
Home: helpmesortoutthenhs.blogspot.com
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