STPs DRIVING NHS PRIVATISATION

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Junior doctors in their strike actions warned that the Tories and Health Secretary Hunt were determined to privatise the NHS
Junior doctors in their strike actions warned that the Tories and Health Secretary Hunt were determined to privatise the NHS

AN OUTSOURCING contractor, whose work for GPs was described by a minister as ‘entirely unacceptable’, and the UK arm of a private US healthcare insurer are to lead the development of a Sustainability and Transformation Partnership (STP).

Doctors leaders have expressed concern over the driving forward of privatisation.

The Nottingham and Nottinghamshire STP has awarded a £2.7m contract to Capita to help turn the STP into a more formal health body in charge of local budgets and healthcare – because it said it did not have the expertise in-house.

Last year, GPs criticised the ‘shambles’ which followed Capita being handed a £700m contract to provide back-up services for practices across England. There were shortages in basic equipment and delays in the transfer of medical notes.

In a Parliamentary debate Coventry North West Labour Party MP Geoffrey Robinson said the NHS had ‘ended up with a terrible service that is costing more than the previous service ever would’ because Capita was not ‘properly prepared … did not have a commitment to providing the service, and was unable to do so.’

Then minister for public health Nicola Blackwood described Capita’s performance as ‘entirely unacceptable’. The Nottingham deal is part of the STP’s development into an ACS (accountable care system) which would take control and responsibility of budgets and commissioning for the entire population of the area – as part of an England-wide drive to meet targets for vast budget cuts and meet pledges to improve local healthcare.

Capita has handed large parts of the contract, which runs during this financial year, to Centene UK, which is part of the major US healthcare insurer Centene Corporation – a firm with the strapline ‘better health outcomes at lower costs’. BMA News understands Capita will mainly be involved in the ‘assurance’ work necessary but Centene will be the ‘boots on the ground’ in developing the ACS.

Doctors leaders said the announcement was ‘extremely concerning’ and potentially validated concerns of health campaigners that the STP process could lead to greater privatisation of the NHS.

BMA East Midlands regional council chair Peter Holden said: ‘Capita’s reputation among doctors is frankly appalling – and it’s even more worrying that they are allowed to sub contract further and that’s compounded by the fact that the firm in question is involved in private healthcare.’

The Matlock GP added: ‘This seems, in some ways, to be a real kick in the teeth for the profession.’ The accountable care system developments for the STP programme – which began last year and saw England carved into 44 areas for local leaders to drive care improvements and savings – was announced by NHS England chief executive Simon Stevens at the NHS Confed 17 event in Liverpool earlier this Summer.

There remain questions on whether the new ACS structures would stand up robustly to legal challenge due to having no mention in the Health and Social Care Act 2012 or any other legislation – and the BMA has repeatedly called for government and NHS leaders to ensure proper governance frameworks are in place before changing structures.

The areas currently progressing STPs into ACS’s are: Frimley Health including Slough, Surrey Heath and Aldershot; South Yorkshire & Bassetlaw, covering Barnsley, Bassetlaw, Doncaster, Rotherham, and Sheffield; Nottinghamshire, with an early focus on Greater Nottingham and Rushcliffe; Blackpool & Fylde Coast with the potential to spread to other parts of the Lancashire and South Cumbria at a later stage; Dorset; Luton, with Milton Keynes and Bedfordshire; Berkshire West, covering Reading, Newbury and Wokingham, and Buckinghamshire.