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A healthy future? Public health in Local Authorities and the new NHS. Robert Dingwall. What were the problems the NHS was supposed to solve?. Lack of co-ordination between primary and secondary care Lack of co-ordination between acute and chronic care
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A healthy future? Public health in Local Authorities and the new NHS Robert Dingwall
What were the problems the NHS was supposed to solve? Lack of co-ordination between primary and secondary care Lack of co-ordination between acute and chronic care Lack of access especially for women and children and people outside the southeast Bankruptcy of most key institutions
The English System in 1939 • Voluntary Hospitals • Local Government services • Public Health • Poor Law/Public Assistance • Mental Health/Mental Deficiency • National Health Insurance
Voluntary Hospitals 1 • A patchwork – some medieval but most 18th & 19th century creations of particular entrepreneurs • Average size was 68 beds • Proliferation of small cottage hospitals • Concentration in London
Voluntary Hospitals 2 • Bankrupt • Lack of revenue • 33% from gifts and investments; 60% from fees • Competition with GPs for out-patient care • Ageing equipment • Fund-raising for showpiece kit that could not be used because of revenue costs • Low wages • Inadequate staffing
Public Health • Local Govt from 1840s • Tensions between MoH and local councils • Tensions with GPs over expansion of M&CW work • Infectious disease control • School health • Cancer treatment • Uneven quality – Inverse care law
Poor Law • Evolution from workhouse system under 1838 Act • Growth of hospital system • Taken over by local councils in 1929 • Care of elderly remained with Poor Law until 1948 • Largely free • Rivalry with GPs
Mental Health/Mental Deficiency • Provided by local authorities but residents paid for by Poor Law authorities • Warehousing facilities • Eugenic separation of the mentally deficient
National Health Insurance • National Insurance Act 1911 • Coverage of workers but not their dependents • No coverage of unemployed • Rose from 26% of population in 1911 to 43% in 1938 • Unpopular with GPs but stabilized their incomes
Health Services in 1939: 1 • Hospitals • Patchy local authority provision of increasing quality but limited capacity • Voluntary hospitals failing: needed huge cash injection and effective nationalization to meet wartime needs • Poor distribution of specialist care because of lack of market
Health Services in 1939: 2 • Public Health • Patchy provision but the best of high quality in some cities with reasonable tax base • Uneasy relationship with GPs • Uneasy relationship with voluntary sector
Health Services in 1939: 3 • Primary Care • Mostly single-handed GPs providing 24 hour cover for small lists • GPs outside London struggling to make a living • Leadership was hostile to NHS but rank and file signed up in droves • Under-investment, isolation and competition • Poor distribution
NHS Act 1946 • Essentially left division between local authorities, primary care and hospitals • Tripartite system • A nationalization measure using central planning to take out inefficiency and address market failure • Investment curtailed by UK’s poor economic performance
Post-War Developments • Benign neglect for most of 1950s • Struggle with Treasury over costs • Hospital plan of 1960s • Attempts to improve management • Poor cost control by clinicians and low status of administrators • Integration in 1974 reorganization
Public Health and Local Authorities Dr. Corinne Camilleri-Ferrante NHS Derbyshire County
Public Health ‘the science and art of preventing disease, prolonging life and promoting health through the organised efforts of society’ Acheson Report 1988
Public Health Functions • Health Protection • Infectious and non-infectious environmental hazards (HPA, SHAs, PCTs) • Health Improvement • Health promotion; health education (PCTs) • Health Care • Quality; commissioning; cost-effectiveness (PCTs, Hospitals, SHAs)
The New Scaffolding GP Consortia NHS Commissioning Board Health and Wellbeing Boards Local Authorities Foundation Trusts Public Health England (part of DH) Monitor Commissioning Support Units
Advantages Local accountability Health and Wellbeing Board – PH represented Individual GP accountability More clinical involvement Integration of health and social care
Challenges to PH Fragmentation Difficult to create programmes of care Reduction in ability to work together Reduction in primary prevention Population perspective Who takes responsibility? How does the accountability work? How does it fit with population choice?
Challenges 2 Reconfiguration of services Role of Commissioning Support Units Performance management Links with social care Quality of care Detail – Bill is very unclear
Challenges 3 Lack of clear accountability Competition - Monitor Any Willing Provider Increase in inequalities (cancer drug fund) Size of consortia Conflicts of interest Coterminosity with LA
Public Health Emergencies • HPA function will be part of DH • PH departments no longer in PCTs • SO: who will take responsibility for e.g. • Flu pandemic? • Major infection outbreak in school? • Meningitis outbreak? • Remember that the Acheson Report was a direct result of an ID disaster!
Public Health Emergencies 2 Lines of accountability unclear GPs recently told that they had made a mess of ordering flu vaccine We currently have an On-call rota: who will be on it in the future? Yet a major ID disaster is the only thing for which a DPH can be directly sacked by the SoS. Responsibility without power?
Public Health Training Local decision making Trusts will have both a planning and providing role PH training appears to be separated from the rest of postgraduate training No clear accountability Where will we train? How do registrars fit in LAs?
Performance Management Clinical governance of GPs What happens to any surplus? Responsible Officer (revalidation) Accountable Officer (e.g. resources, controlled drugs) Financial problems Local arm of National Commissioning Board
In Conclusion Is this the end of the NHS? Devil’s in the Detail: My crystal ball is a little murky, but I believe there will be an intermediate tier and I believe we’ll somehow make it work This is high risk: evaluate the Pathfinders and put PH back in the centre of things, not on the periphery