Reform / Living to be 500, death by asteroid, and the inevitability of NHS reform
Reform / Living to be 500, death by asteroid, and the inevitability of NHS reform
while typically the private sector succeeds by showing how well it is doing, the
public sector often declaims its own failure in the hope of extracting more government spending.
And, partly, it’s because publicly-funded healthcare means collective
decisions about who will get what – the very essence of politics, and ethics. So, like the proxy wars fought by Cold War superpowers in far-off places, what are putatively local conflicts – in this case “health policy debates” – often turn out to be manifestations of far deeper ideological clashes. About state versus market. Freedom versus solidarity. Autonomy versus paternalism. No wonder these zombie “NHS” controversies keep reappearing, continually inverting discussion of “ends” with debates about “means”.
Such then is the terrain on which all NHS reform plays out. But the new
If you’re prone to pessimism, there’s much to depress you as you survey the coming
government is also confronted by two further paradoxes.
decade and beyond. A throbbing economic hangover from the worst global
NHS reform is most urgent when funding is tight. But, historically, NHS
recession in a century. The seven billionth human contribution to climate change.
reform has needed substantial budgetary lubrication (the Clarke reforms of the
And for those with an apocalyptic streak, Astronomer-Royal Martin Rees’s
early 1990s and the Blair reforms of the 2000s being just the most recent examples).
prediction of a one-in-two chance that our species will be extinct by 2100.
In constrained circumstances, policymakers often, therefore, resort to short term
But for those of a more cheerful disposition, consider Steven Pinker’s
expedients. Of the needed NHS efficiency gains over the next several years, the
recent observation that violence has declined such that we are now living in the
Department of Health says that at least four fifths will come from a top-down staff
most peaceful epoch in human history. Or reflect on the perhaps somewhat
pay freeze and a hospital pricing squeeze. So the first paradox is that, despite the
tongue-in-cheek claim I heard from one of the world’s leading Nobel-winning
Sturm und Drang over the new Government’s decentralising health legislation, in
geneticists at Davos last year that breakthroughs in cell biology could mean
practice the NHS is once again in a highly centralising moment. In time, the attempt
human life expectancies of 500 years. And that within two decades we may be
to run the NHS as if it were one big hospital will inevitably again be superseded.
able to pinpoint advanced life forms elsewhere in the universe.
Managing that transition – against the backdrop of continuing austerity – is going
Set against such profound possibilities – that surely rival the invention of
to require exceptional sophistication in policy design, political stewardship,
agriculture, the Copernican revolution or Gutenberg’s printing press – rehashed
managerial execution, clinical engagement, and public communication, if a crash
debates about British public sector reform seem thin gruel. But controversial
these reforms always are, and nowhere more so than in the NHS.
In designing that transition, policymakers are faced with a second paradox.
Why is that? And how should we reconcile the facts of steadily improving
Improving population health, care quality and service efficiency mostly requires
patient care and population health with the periodically-recurring narrative of an
changes in how clinical care is delivered and how patients are engaged. Yet most
NHS reforms focus instead on rearranging the administrative deck chairs,
Partly, it’s because of the NHS’s tax-funding mechanism, which means
particularly the layer of management that sits between Whitehall and the GP
that whenever the post-war British economy sneezes, the NHS catches a cold. In
surgery or the hospital. In part, this is a genuine – if ultimately unsuccessful –
1951, 1968, 1976, 1987-88 and 1999, the infection nearly proved fatal. So, despite
attempt to try and upgrade the effectiveness of these “intermediate tier”
its effectiveness as a reasonably equitable, if somewhat crude cost control
organisations.61 But, in part, this is also displacement activity. It avoids asking –
mechanism, the inevitable lumpiness of NHS tax-funding has also meant long
and having to answer – the far tougher questions about what the NHS and its staff
periods of relative underfunding, followed by acute but avoidable crises, and then
bursts of compensatory but inflationary “catch-up” spending. And, since Britain
For example, how is it that only half of NHS diabetes patients get the
has not in fact eliminated economic boom and bust (just as “history” did not in fact “end” with the collapse of the Berlin Wall), the NHS now faces its deepest and
61 These periodical y reincarnated entities exhibit a limited set of naming permutations down the
most sustained budget crunch since 1948.
years: health authorities, area health authorities, district health authorities, strategic health
Partly, too, it’s because – as Canadian academic Bob Evans has noted –
authorities, regional health authorities, regional offices, primary care groups, clinical
commissioning groups, primary care trusts, and so on.
Reform / Living to be 500, death by asteroid, and the inevitability of NHS reform
Reform / Living to be 500, death by asteroid, and the inevitability of NHS reform
evidence-based care they need – with a five-fold variation across the country?62
How can there be a 40 per cent difference in local rates of age-standardised NHS
What is the regulatory and policy regime best placed to help the NHS do so?
hip replacements, cataract surgeries and gall bladder operations?63 How can a
Some of the active ingredients are: actively empower patients so their needs and
quarter of NHS trusts get away with having their “value for money” accounts
preferences continually reshape care delivery; align incentives, information and
qualified by their auditors?64 How can a fifth of hospitals treat their older patients
decision rights with the frontline health professionals who can best effect
without dignity or compassion?65 Why is it that nearly a third of health care
improvement; remove barriers that block job redesign and new ways of working;
organisations say they still lack a system for monitoring the performance of
look sceptically at organisational monopolies created in the name of integration;
medical practitioners?66 And how is it that a single hospital in mid-Staffordshire
prefer rapid experimentation, adaptive feedback loops, and emergent organisational
could have been responsible for killing its patients at a level equivalent to two or
configurations over one-size-fits all solutions from Whitehall; stimulate pluralism
more Lockerbie air crashes, yet apparently no one noticed or did anything?67
by ensuring level playing fields for new entrants; strengthen scrutiny of clinical
These are the inconvenient truths that any fundamental reform
care, and introduce full public transparency on performance variation; and ensure
programme would tackle. Genuine reform would also help “future proof” the
the overarching structure of health system regulation is fit-for-purpose.
health service against major environmental trends headed its way, such as the
If “to will the end is to will the means”, these are some of the agenda items
ageing population, the rise of chronic diseases, and a decline in paternalism. It
that NHS reformers will have to pursue over the coming few years. But, as the
would do so in part by taking full advantage of some important opportunities.
King James Bible puts it: “where there is no vision, the people perish”.70 So, rather
On the demand side, at a time when six out of ten British adults are
than framing the debate on the future of the NHS in narrowly technocratic terms,
overweight or obese, the new science of consumer behavioural change has clear
or as an unpalatable but unavoidable response to austerity, reformers should also
implications for prevention and health, which the wider debate on food policy,
paint an optimistic and inspiring vision of what progress could mean for patients
urban design and the like should not obscure.68 As important will be the future of
and for health professionals as the 21st century unfolds.
informal voluntary care. Valued at £119 billion a year, and functioning as a hidden “heat sink” (the Big Society in action?), its rise or fall will have profound implications for the sustainability of formal tax-funded health and social services.
On the supply side, as biology becomes an information science, as the cost of
personal gene sequencing falls from up to $3 billion to perhaps $1000, and as digitisation opens the way for profound changes in how medicine and healthcare is delivered, will the NHS embrace or resist the new possibilities presented by personalised medicine, nano-robots, vaccinations against virus-inducing cancers, tissue engineering, and neuro-assisted devices – to name but a few of the technologies that are headed our way? Doing so holds out the prospects of important advances in health and well-being, but will mean weaning the NHS off anachronistic
62 Department of Health (2010), NHS Atlas of Variation.
69 Imagine for example a new medicine that could reduce the risk of diabetes by 58 per cent:
63 Appleby, J. et al. (2011), Variations in health care – the good, the bad and the inexplicable, King’s
doubtless the pharmaceutical industry would have quickly mobilized to ensure widespread
Fund. Rates are standardised for age and gender differences between geographies.
worldwide adoption. But what if an equal y dramatic impact was found to be obtainable by a
64 Health Service Journal (2011), “Quarter of trusts fail on value for money”, 18 August.
careful y-tailored lifestyle intervention? In the decade since a landmark randomized control trial of
65 Care Quality Commission (2011), Dignity and nutrition inspection programme: national overview.
a support intervention for weight and diet showed precisely that, the NHS has done nothing to
66 Health Service Journal (2011), “Fitness to practice”, 20 October.
implement it at scale. See: Diabetes Prevention Program Research Group (2002), “Reduction in
British Medical Journal (2011), “Head of Healthcare Commission excised figures on excess deaths
the Incidence of Type 2 Diabetes with Lifestyle Intervention or Metformin”, New England Journal of
from Mid Staffordshire report”, Vol. 342, 6 May.
68 Cabinet Office (2010), Applying behavioural insight to health.
NOM SCIENTIFIQUE Rudbeckia deamii. Rudbeckia laciniata. Echinacea purpurea. NOM COMMUN La famille des Asteraceae, aussi connue sous l’ancien nom de Compositae, est l’une des plus importantes chez les végétaux Il s’agit de plantes, le plus souvent herbacées, possédant des inflorescences en capitule (type pissenlit). Un capitule n’est pas une fleur, mais un ensembl
Kleintierärzte Praktikertag 24. März 2012 Hotel Schatzalp, Davos: „Alles was sie schon immer wissen wollten über chronische Schmerzen und deren Therapie“ 2 SVK Punkte (5 h ATF) für nur 100.- Sfr Dieser Weiterbildungstag für praktische Tierärzte zum Thema chronische Schmerzen bei Haustieren findet anschliessend an den Frühjahreskongress der Assoc of Veterinary Anaesthetists (AVA) s