How local NHS,
public health, and care services will be shaped
Local people and professionals will have much more say in shaping
healthcare in their areas - and NHS, social care and public health
services will work closer together.
The Government is asking for views from the public, health
professionals and anyone else with an interest in local health
issues, on two public consultations launched today:
· Commissioning for Patients; and
· Local Democratic Legitimacy in Health.
This follows the publication on 12 July of the White Paper
Equity and excellence: Liberating the NHS.
Crucial elements of a truly personalised and local health system
have been proposed, that will make it easier for everyone to shape
local health services and hold them to account in the future.
The Health Secretary and Communities Secretary have set out
proposals on how patients, locally elected councillors, local
authorities, public health experts and others will work side by
side with GP consortia to make health services meet the needs of
people in local areas and improve health outcomes.
This partnership, led by local authorities, will mean services
become more responsive, and developed in ways that fit around the
people who use them.
Patients and the public will also have a stronger voice through a
new patient group, local HealthWatch - a ‘citizen’s advice bureau’
for health and social care. Local people from HealthWatch would
also influence local plans ensuring they fit community needs.
Secretary of State for Health, Andrew Lansley,
said:
“Power has to be devolved to local people so that decisions about
their health are made by them, or by people that best understand
their needs.
“Whitehall can’t prescribe all of this, and the health service
shouldn’t wait for a rule book from Government. Everyone should
have their say in these consultations so we can get on with
building strong local partnerships and improve people’s health.”
The proposals also mean that health can be considered alongside
other crucial services like education and housing – recognising
the impact that these services can have on the health of
individuals and families – for example, suitable housing can help
older people stay safe, healthy and independent.
Communities Secretary Eric Pickles said:
“A decade of centralising, controlling government has left public
services like the NHS strangled with red tape, lumbered with
target after target, and weakened by the need to report to
bureaucrats instead of the public.
“Under proposals published today, for the first time in forty
years there will be local democratic accountability and legitimacy
in the NHS.
“Elected councils will have a key role including commissioning
HealthWatch’ services to guarantee patients a voice. As we push
power away from Whitehall we will make the health service more
answerable to patients not politicians.”
Within a ring-fenced public health budget, local health
improvement funds will be held by local authorities, and decisions
about how this is spent will take account of all the local issues
that impact on people’s wellbeing. Local Directors of Public
Health will be crucial to this process, and the national Public
Health Service, when created, will complement local decision
making with evidence, research and evaluation.
Commissioning for patients
The second consultation, Commissioning for Patients, sets out
detailed proposals to put GP consortia in charge of commissioning
services that best meet the needs of local people, supported by an
independent NHS Commissioning Board.
It asks for views on a number of areas, including:
· how GP consortia and the NHS Commissioning Board can best
involve patients in improving the quality of health services;
· how GP consortia can work closely with secondary care,
community partners and other health and care professionals to
design joined-up services that are responsive to patients and the public;
· how the NHS Commissioning Board and GP consortia can best work
together ensure a national framework that supports consortia in
making effective and efficient commissioning decisions; and
· how the NHS Commissioning Board can best support consortia and
hold them to account for the outcomes they achieve and their
stewardship of NHS resources.
Notes to Editors
1. The White Paper Equity and Excellence: Liberating the
NHS, was published on 12 July 2010 and set out the
Government’s strategy for the NHS.
http://www.dh.gov.uk/en/Publicationsandstatistics/Publications/PublicationsPolicyAndGuidance/DH_117353
2. The consultations published today can be found at: http://www.dh.gov.uk/en/Consultations/Liveconsultations/DH_117586
3. The consultation will run from 22 July until 11 October 2010.
4. People can submit their views via email:
NHSWhitePaper@dh.gsi.gov.uk or by post: White Paper team, Room
601, Department of Health, 79 Whitehall, London SW1A 2NS.
5. For media enquiries please contact the Department of Health
press office on 020 7210 5221.
Contacts:
Department of Health
Phone: 020 7210 5221
NDS.DH@coi.gsi.gov.uk