Print

Print


Dear Alex,
You might be interested to know that Sir Muir Gray, the Guru of EBM is the Head of of the QIPP 'RightCare' Workstream, and as a consultant in public health medicine with a specialty interest in evidenced-based health services commissioning, I too am proud to be associated closely with the workstream. I moderate a UK wide public health health services commissioning network which consists of more than 270 consultants in public health who are all specialists in evidenced-based health services commissioning.
While it would be too much to go into all the details of the QIP Workstream, can I add that that if if left-leaning academics like you (who have no practical knowledge of working at the coal face of the NHS and of dealing with tight NHS finances) had supported us when we first put such evidenced-based proposals to the then Labour government to contain burgeoning NHS costs and transfer the savings to reducing health inequalities, we wouldn't have been in such sh-t now. The problem with Labour is that they always speak the right words on reducing health inequalities but they do precious little practically in putting their words where their mouth is, especially where the NHS is concerned. Instead of supporting evidenced-based care (which has to be affordable), Labour pandered to the likes of big pharma and the medical device manufacturers (300 million on setting up 3 proton beam therapy machines to treat 4500 cases, for which there is hardly any robust evidence-base) and the healthcare wants of the vociferous, voluble, well-connected, well-heeled and literate middle class whose votes they were desperately seeking. Today we are reaping the seeds of what Labour has sowed!!! And you all call yourselves supporters of the poor, I say 'shame on you armchair academics'!!!!
The NHS is free for those at the point of healthcare need, NOT at the point of healthcare wants. Labour found it very difficult to make difficult and unpopular prioritisation choices and so now we have a proliferation of healthcare wants, not needs, and the NHS cannot afford it any more.
You might like to read a recent JAMA article that I have co-authored with an eminent american Prof of Oncology and EBM on 'From Efficacy to Effectiveness in the face of uncertainty: indication creep and prevention creep'
 http://jama.ama-assn.org/content/305/19/2005.full.pdf+html?ath_user=nhsapaul017&ath_ttok=%3CTjbGYaNDZ7hg9Be3Vg%3E. This is what is happening in the NHS today!
I am willing to engage in a full public debate with you or with anybody else on the merits of health care wants versus health care needs, if you want to.
Kind regards,
 
Ash
Dr Ash Paul
Medical Director
NHS Bedfordshire
21 Kimbolton Road
Bedford
MK40 2AW
Tel no: 01234897224
Email: [log in to unmask]
 


From: Alex Scott-Samuel <[log in to unmask]>
To: [log in to unmask]
Sent: Monday, 1 August 2011, 15:20
Subject: "Reducing spending on low clinical value treatments"

I have only just come across this document, which is presumably one of the triggers for the unpublicised, un-consulted-on clinical rationing taking place in many areas. While its encouragement to eliminate ineffective treatments makes total sense, its assertions on treatments with 'a close benefit or risk balance in mild cases' seem questionable. These include cataract surgery and joint replacements.

I would be very interested in your knowledge on how this is being applied nationally, often I gather, in conjunction with "the ‘right care’ workstream" of the so-called QIPP programme.

Thanks, Alex


Audit Commission. Reducing spending on low clinical value treatments. Health Briefing, April 2011.

http://www.audit-commission.gov.uk/sitecollectiondocuments/downloads/20110414reducingexpenditure.pdf