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Doctors for Reform has written to the three main party leaders urging a fresh look at the NHS, pointing out that Britain has European levels of spending on health but still falls short of European standards.
The doctors’ letter is backed by an opinion poll showing that two thirds of voters believe that in its present form the NHS will never meet public demand, however much is spent on it.
More than half of those questioned do not believe that the extra spending has resulted in real improvements to the NHS.
The initiative by Doctors for Reform comes at a critical moment. After huge spending and patchy improvement, large parts of the NHS are in deficit and laying off staff.
Andrew Holdenby, director of Reform, the free-market think-tank that backs Doctors for Reform, said: “Now that the big spending increases are coming to an end, the NHS . . . still doesn’t fulfil patients’ rising expectations. We want to start a serious debate about where to go.”
Since its launch two years ago, Doctors for Reform has grown from 500 doctors to almost 800. They come from all three political parties, disproving government claims that they are simply a stalking-horse for Conservative ideas.
Professor Karol Sikora, one of the letter’s signatories, a cancer specialist, said: “Doctors are apathetic, politically. Few belong to political parties, but they are getting to the end of their tether. The problem for the future is going to be matching the consumerist demand from patients, especially the young, with the social equity of the NHS. The system we have today is heavy on bureaucracy and poor on delivery.
“It is doomed to fail, because with a single monolithic employer it cannot adapt to either technical or societal change. Compared to that, what we see in Europe are far more flexible systems that cost no more and deliver much better care.”
Christoph Lees, a consultant in obstetrics and a co-signatory, said: “Centrally dictated targets do produce some results but they distort priorities. Those specialties outside the target areas become Cinderellas — mental health and maternity services are examples. The attempts to save money are undermining clinical relationships in an outrageous way. It’s a doctor’s obligation to act in the patient’s best interests, but often we can no longer do that.”
David Wrede, a consultant obstetrician and gynaecologist and a former Liberal Democrat parliamentary candidate, said: “Ministers talk the language of choice, but there is less choice now than there was years ago, when we could refer patients to anywhere we wanted,” he said.
Doctors for Reform believes that only by opening up the NHS to different sources of financing will it be liberated, allowing “a modern, truly comprehensive system” to emerge.
Andrew Holdenby believed that political leaders were reluctant to tamper with the NHS because they were convinced the public was devoted to it, but the Reform poll, carried out at the end of March by ICM, suggests that this is a myth.
POLL BACKS NEED FOR CHANGE
61 per cent of Labour voters in a Reform poll, carried out at the end of March by ICM, agree that in its present form the National Health Service is unlikely ever to meet public demand. Across the 1,000 voters of all parties who were questioned, 67 per cent agree
36 per cent of respondents in that poll agree that politicians are right to rule out alternative funding mechanisms, while 58 per cent disagree (with 56 per cent of Labour voters)
67 per cent agree that none of the political parties is setting out attractive ideas for delivering a better healthcare system, while 65 per cent agree that the health service was the right idea when it was set up in the 1940s but that we need a different health system now
74 per cent of the Reform poll favour removing politicians from day-to-day running of the health service, and 83 per cent agree that it makes no difference if hospitals or surgeries are run by the Government, not-for-profit organisations or the private sector, provided that everyone has access to care
53 per cent agree that the NHS is the finest health service in the world, but most of that support is from older people. Only 35 per cent of those aged 18 to 24 share that view
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