The Health and
Social Care Bill today gained Royal Assent to become the Health
and Social Care Act (2012).
The core principles of the Act mean that doctors and nurses will
be able to tailor services for their patients, more choice will be
given to patients over how they are treated, and bureaucracy in
the NHS will be reduced.
The Act will:
• Devolve power to front-line doctors and nurses: Health
professionals will be free to design and tailor local health
services for their patients;
• Drive up quality: Patients will benefit from a renewed focus on
improving quality and outcomes;
• Ensure a focus on integration: There will be strong duties on
the health service to promote integration of services;
• Strengthen public health: Giving responsibility for local
public health services to local authorities will ensure that they
are able to pull together the work done by the NHS, social care,
housing, environmental health, leisure and transport services;
• Give patients more information and choice: Patients will have
greater information on how the NHS is performing and the range of
providers they can choose for their healthcare. And they will have
a stronger voice through Healthwatch England and local Healthwatch;
• Strengthen local democratic involvement: Power will shift from
Whitehall to town hall – there will be at least one locally
elected councillor and a representative of Healthwatch on every
Health and Wellbeing Board, to influence and challenge
commissioning decisions and promote integrated health and care;
• Reduce bureaucracy: Two layers of management - Primary Care
Trusts and Strategic Health Authorities - will be removed through
the Act, saving £4.5 billion over the lifetime of this Parliament,
with every penny being reinvested in patient care.
Andrew Lansley, the Health Secretary, said:
"The Health and Social Care Act will deliver more power
to clinicians, it will put patients at the heart of the NHS, and
it will reduce the costs of bureaucracy.
"We now have an opportunity to secure clinical
leadership to deliver improving quality and outcomes; better
results for patients is our objective."
Professor Steve Field, chair of the NHS Future Forum, said:
"It was a tremendous privilege to be able to chair the
Independent NHS Future Forum. All the comments and debate that we
heard helped improve the Bill.
"Chairing the Future Forum gave me the rare opportunity
to meet a huge variety of patients, the passionate health
professionals and organisations that make the NHS what it is.
What’s vital now is that the Government continues to work closely
with them to put the freedoms the Bill offers into
practice."
Dr Nadim Fazlani, a GP and the leader of a Clinical Commissioning
Group in Liverpool, said:
"The new structure of the NHS will give me and my
colleagues much more freedom and control to design care around our
patients. ‘No decision about me without me’ is a key concept – my
colleagues and I will be working directly with patients, giving
them a wider choice of where, when and how they receive their healthcare."
The implementation of the Act will now enable clinical leaders,
patients’ representatives and local government to all take new and
leading roles in shaping more effective services.
Notes to Editors
1. For all media enquiries, please phone the Department of Health
newsdesk on 020 7210 5221.
Contacts:
Department of Health
Phone: 020 7210 5221
NDS.DH@coi.gsi.gov.uk