Health reforms 'need patient voice'

Several leading charities have called for patients to be given a stronger voice in local health services
12 April 2012

Radical plans to reform the healthcare system must be amended to give patients a stronger say over their local services, a group of leading health charities has said.

The eight organisations, which represent millions of patients, called on the Government to make "crucial changes" to the Health and Social Care Bill, "to ensure the NHS will be answerable to everyone it serves".

They described plans to make a network of GP commissioning consortia - which will be responsible for £80 billion of the health service budget - accountable to the public as "weak".

And they said that democratically elected representatives should be used to scrutinise decisions and budget management at a local level.

In a letter to The Times, the charities, which include the Alzheimer's Society, Asthma UK, The British Heart Foundation and Breakthrough Breast Cancer, said: "We support the Government's aim to put patient involvement and democratic accountability at the heart of the health system. However there is a gap between rhetoric and reality.

"The reforms will place £80 billion of the NHS budget into the hands of GPs, but plans to make GP consortia accountable to the public are far too weak. The plans will allow local authorities to replace existing democratically elected overview and scrutiny committees with their own systems."

The letter continued: "Greater patient and public involvement leads to better care and more efficient services yet the proposed reforms do little to give patients a stronger voice at a local level.

"The new local HealthWatch bodies described in the Bill will not have the powers or resources to ensure that patients have a say in their local health services. If they are to serve a meaningful purpose they must be significantly strengthened."

Under the reforms, GPs will take control of commissioning services for patients. Strategic health authorities and primary care trusts (PCTs), which currently commission services, will be abolished.

So far, 141 GP consortia, serving more than half of the population of England, have now signed up as "pathfinders" to pilot the new arrangements ahead of their planned implementation in 2013.

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