RCN and RCM come out against bill

  • 19 January 2012
RCN and RCM come out against bill

The Department of Health has expressed its โ€œdisappointmentโ€ with the decision of two royal medical colleges to announce their opposition to the Health and Social Care Bill.

Both the Royal College of Nursing and the Royal College of Midwives have come out against the bill and are calling for it to be withdrawn.

The decision follows the British Medical Associationโ€™s move in December to oppose the totality of health secretary Andrew Lansleyโ€™s reforms, which were first set out in the โ€˜Liberating the NHSโ€™ white paper more than 18 months ago.

The DH said the collegesโ€™ moves were disappointing. โ€œDuring the course of the past 12 months we have been working with nursing groups to shape our plans for a modern NHS.

"For example, nurses will be represented on local clinical commissioning groups,โ€ it said in a statement.

The statement also cited Prime Minister David Cameronโ€™s recent announcement about changes to nursing practices as a reason for the RCN and RCM to support the reforms.

โ€œJust two weeks ago, the Prime Minister set out plans โ€“ welcomed by the RCN โ€“ to get rid of red tape so that nurses have more time to spend with their patients.โ€

A DH spokesperson accused the colleges of conflating their membersโ€™ concerns about pay, pensions and the need for the NHS to deliver significant savings, with issues about the bill.

He insisted the reforms were needed to โ€œempower doctors, nurses, and other frontline healthcare workers across the NHS to take charge of improving care.โ€

David Cameron told Parliament yesterday that it would not be possible to deliver the โ€˜Nicholson challengeโ€™ โ€“ for the NHS to deliver efficiency savings of ยฃ20 billion over four years โ€“ without such reforms.

โ€œTo argue just that the NHS simply needs money and not reform, I do not believe is right,โ€ he said in a noisy Prime Ministerโ€™s Questions, that otherwise focused on the UKโ€™s rising unemployment figures.

However, a detailed briefing paper issued by the RCN to explain why it is opposing the bill, says the โ€˜Nicholson challengeโ€™ is presenting staff with โ€œmonumental difficultiesโ€ and the reforms are adding to the pain.

โ€œDealing with such significant cuts to services and staff members would be difficult at any time. Having to deal with it during a programme of dramatic and distracting reform makes the job virtually impossible,โ€ the college said in its own statement.

The RCN paper goes on to say that it is not seeing evidence of intelligent, well thought out service redesign and reconfiguration, and that the DHโ€™s move to get nurses onto emerging CCGs is not being followed through on the ground.

Like the BMA, it also raises concerns about the governmentโ€™s commitment to introducing more competition to the NHS.

It says that although the government has changed the proposed role of Monitor from promoting competition to keeping an eye on anti-competitive behaviour, the changes do not go far enough.

In another development this morning, the Guardian and the Telegraph reported that Monitor plans to ask credit ratings agencies, such as Standard and Poorโ€™s, to rate NHS foundation trusts for credit-worthiness.

The ratings agencies have been heavily criticised for failing to spot problems at major companies, such as Enron, and for their role in the current banking crisis.

Meanwhile, the RCMโ€™s chief executive, Cathy Warwick, said the government has not shown that drastic changes to the structure of the NHS are necessary.

โ€œThey have failed to present evidence that the upheaval will result in an improvement in services to the people of Englandโ€ฆ

"Breaking up what we have, embracing the private sector, and injecting full-blown competition and market forces is not what the NHS needs or what health professionals and patients want.โ€

Warwick said the RCM supports the general push towards clinically-led commissioning, greater engagement of service users in their care, and more integrated services, but this could be achieved without a โ€œdivisive and costly bill."

The UKโ€™s largest union, Unison, has supported the new wave of opposition and called for the billโ€™s withdrawal. It said the bill will lead to fragmentation, instability and inequity in the NHS.

โ€œIt is wasting billions of taxpayersโ€™ money on pointless bureaucracy, as health workers lose their jobs, waiting lists grow and operations are cancelled.โ€

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