Title: The founding principles of the NHS
1The founding principles of the NHS
- Colin Leys
- Centre for International Public Health Policy
- University of Edinburgh
2Universal, comprehensive and free
- from the date of the earliest planning
documents it had been assumed that the new health
service would be universal (available to all),
comprehensive (including all services, both
preventive and curative), and free (involving no
payment at the point of delivery). -
- (Charles Webster, The NHS A Political History,
p. 22)
3A first class service for all
- Bevans scheme involved an explicit
egalitarian commitment and a first-class standard
of treatment, thereby implying emancipation from
the preoccupation with the minimum or
subsistence standards that had characterised
earlier proposals. - (Webster, The NHS, p. 24)
4The NHS is no longer comprehensive or fully
universal ability to pay is back
- Dental care, routine eye care, long-term
residential care, domiciliary care and hospice
care must now be paid for - A return to a minimum or core of free
services is now anticipated (the BMA, A national
way forward for the NHS in England, p. 11)
5Since 2000 government policy has been to create a
market in health care
- Market advocates argue that only competition can
make the NHS efficient - By 2008-10 all NHS trusts will be Foundation
Trusts with market freedom, answerable to the
independent regulator, not the Secretary of State - They will compete with each other and with
private providers for patient revenues.
6Existing UK private providers could not compete
with NHS trusts
- Geared to treating a small number of privately
insured patients typically in small hospitals or
private units - Relied almost entirely on NHS consultants working
part-time - Consequently, a high-cost business model
7A new kind of private health care sector had to
be created via ISTCs
- spare health capacity in other health systems
will be made available through new surgical
and diagnostic units that are set up and run by
independent operators and staffed with overseas
clinicians This will be a new sector in health
provision in England the NHS will be the core
business of units in this sector - (Growing Capacity a new role for external
healthcare providers in England, DH June 2002)
8The ISTC programme
- 13 mainly foreign-owned companies, operating some
48 centres in England - Contracts run for five years in principle
renewable indefinitely, subject to renegotiation - The first wave opened in 2003
- The second phase is opening in 2007, (i.e. to run
concurrently with the first wave)
9Wave 1 Independent Sector Treatment Centres
(ISTCs) starting in 2003
- Company No. of Total procedures
centres over five years - Netcare (Opthalmic chain) 89,600
- Capio 9 93,441
- Mercury 5
498,151 - Nations Healthcare 3
276,680 - Partnership Health Group 3 128,144
- Interhealth 2
33,817 - Clinicenta 2
158,845 - UK Specialist Hospitals 1
56,242
10Phase 2 ISTCs, CATS and ICATS, starting in 2007
(a) electives
- Company No. of Centres
Total procedures - over 5 years
- Netcare 2 (CATS)
1,020,000 - Capio 1
55,000 - Mercury Health 1
145,000 - Partnership Health Group 1
615,000 - Clinicenta 2
2,620,000 - UK Specialist hospitals 1
139,000 - BUPA 2
109,000 - Nuffield 1
146,620 - Care UK 1 (CATS))
220,000 - Fresenius (England-wide haemodialysis)
500,000 -
11Phase 2 (b) diagnostics
- Company No of centres Procedures
over 5 years - Inhealth Netcare 2
1,450,000 - Atos Origin 2
2,350,000 - Mercury Healthcare 1
942,500 - BUPA 1
500,000 - AMC Diagnostics 1
770,000 - (Alliance Medical and Care UK)
- Alliance Medical 1 (PET/CT scans)
240,000 - Molecular Imaging 1 (PET/CT scans)
215,000 - Solutions (InHealth Group)
12Wave 1 and Phase 2 ISTCs combinedProcedures
contracted for per annum
- Wave 1 Phase 2 Total
- Average no. 176,000 1,117m. 1.287m.
- of electives
- Average no. 182,000 1.494m. 1.512m.
- of diagnostics
13Actual performance of Wave 1 ISTCs
- Total numbers of procedures
- Contracted for Carried out Average
carried - 2003-2008 by Jan 07 out
per annum - Elective
- 880,000 114,000
38,000 - Diagnostic
- 912,000 60,000
20,000
14The scale of private provision contracted for
requires the transfer of NHS staff to private
employment
- The additionality rule has been effectively
abolished - NHS staff are being transferred to ISTCs via
secondment, re-worked individual consultants
contracts, and some explicit staff transfers to
ISTC employment - But no upper limit to the role of the private
sector in the NHS (Hewitt, November 2006) means
that this model can only work in the short term
15Five stages in the experience of NHS staff as the
private sector expands
- 1. Secondments from the NHS to private sector
providers - 2. NHS contracts are reworked so that more and
more non-contracted hours are worked for
private providers - 3. Growing medical unemployment forces staff to
accept private sector employment on non-NHS terms - 4. NHS trusts reduce terms and working conditions
to compete with private provider terms - 5. NHS training is cut accordingly
self-regulation is curtailed to make this
possible
16 The transaction costs of the market estimated
percentage of the NHS budget spent on
administration
- Mid-1970s 5-6
- Mid-1990s, with the internal market
11-12 -
- 2007 (with the PFI, patient choice,
20 ? - payment by results, fee for service,
- contracting costs, accounting,
- marketing, advertising, legal costs,
- etc.)
- Estimates by Charles Webster, official historian
of the NHS