Welcome Guest | Login | Register | Why Register? |
Newsletter RSS Twitter
19 March 2010 | 14:03 GMT


HOME | NEWS | DOCUMENT LIBRARY | FEATURES | OPINION & ANALYSIS | EVENTS | RESEARCH REPORTS | AWARDS | PODCASTS | VIDEO DIARIES

Tory manifesto has records for all

Tags: A   Cameron   Conservatives   General election   Manifesto  

04 Jan 2010

David Cameron has promised that online health records will underpin a new direction for the NHS if the Conservative Party is elected in this year’s general election.

In a speech at Westminster today, the Tory leader unveiled the first chapter of the Conservative Party’s draft manifesto, which focuses on the health service.

Cameron said: “It’s the patient who’ll have the power in our NHS. You’ll be able to check your health records online in the same way you do your bank account.

“We will put patients in charge of their own health records, with the ability to choose which providers they share them with.”

The pledge follows speculation last year that the Conservatives might scrap aspects of the National Programme for IT in the NHS and introduce commercial health record platforms instead.

The manifesto gives no information on whether companies such as Microsoft and Google would be involved in devliering on the pledge if the party comes to power.

It does say the Tories would “unleash an information revolution in the NHS by making detailed data about the performance of trusts, hospitals, GPs, doctors and other staff available to the public online so everyone will know who is providing a good service and who is falling behind.”

Cameron added: “You’ll have information about how good different doctors are, how good different hospitals are, information about the things that really matter, like cancer survival rates, the rate of hospital infections, your chance of going home to live independently if you have a stroke.”

The speech coincided with the launch of a public poster campaign promising that the Conservatives will not cut NHS funding. 1,000 posters will be put up featuring a picture of Cameron alongside the words “We can’t go on like this. I’ll cut the deficit, not the NHS.”

The manifesto includes sections that suggest the Conservatives are anxious about being seen as a party of the rich.

It pledges to introduce a ‘health premium’ that will divert money to the most deprived areas of the country, and which councils and public health officials will be able to use to tackle health inequalities.

It says the Conservatives would introduce maternity networks to improve services. Yet other sections of the manifesto echo the introduction of the ‘internal market’ to the NHS.

It says the party would give GPs the power to hold patients’ budgets and commission care on their behalf and create an independent NHS board to allocate resources to different parts of the country.

Cameron said: “We’re going to introduce a health premium that targets resources on the poorest areas so we banish health inequalities to history. With our plans, the poorer the area, the worse the health outcomes tend to be, so the more money they can get.”

The manifesto sees the start an election campaign, which could last as long as five months.

Link: Conservative’s Draft Manifesto 2010: Chapter One: Our reform plan for the NHS

Sarah Bruce

Related Articles
Related Articles

© 2009 E-HEALTH-MEDIA LTD. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

Readers Comments
Add a comment
Readers Comments

1

Is this pledge on choice new?

05 Jan 10 09:59

Is the pledge to allow patients a choice on who can view their online record new?

Also its not clear whether this is back to the idea of Google, Microsoft, A N Other managing patient records online or our very own NHS HealthSpace. 

Is this an ommission or deliberate vagueness?

Surely the online medical record that is closest to being able to realise these ambitions is HealthSpace. This is the one the NHS has been painstakingly, and very slowly, developing and that actually links to the summary care record - extracted from the GP record.

 


2

Whither the Hayes report?

05 Jan 10 11:17

Not even early days yet - but I fear the Tories are set to replicate the fundamental error of the Blair administration's NPfIT vision, that which the Hayes report astutely avoids...

http://bit.ly/5jWpUt

Those paid to deliver the useless and the undeliverable may change - but the waste and tragedy of the opportunity cost shall continue.

It looks like the next five years of NHS IT is fated to be more voter eye candy and meaningless performance pseudo-statistics. Can we ever move beyond this?

There instead should be the mundane business of giving health professionals the IT tools they need to do their job efficiently, effectively and SAFELY! But no votes in that it would appear :-(

 

 


3

Patients can access their GP records now through EMIS/PAERS

brian.fisher403@ntlworld.com

06 Jan 10 15:39

I'm delighted that the Tories are committed to patient record access. All EMIS practices can now offer their patients secure access to their full GP record online, linked with appointment and repeat prescription booking. THis is a service free to patients and practices.

The record is linked to information automatically so that patients can understand what they read. There is a secure messaging service that saves time. In the future there will be more transactional services for practices and patients.

The Tories can take this process and easily systematise it across the NHS. The patient holds the key and data is not held outside the GP server. This is potentially transformative stuff - it does not need reinventing!

Brian Fisher, co-director of PAERS Ltd


4

And the next step is...

06 Jan 10 16:41

Ok   my GP is an EMIS user, if I register to allow repeat prescription booking by me, will it use the ETP process to send the approved prescription  to a pharmacy of my choice to be ready when I want to collect it?

If it doesn't then there is not much advantage over the phone system as I still have to traipse to the surgery to pick up a piece of paper and then go to the pharmacy and wait for it to be dispensed. Or get a nonminated local pharmacy to pick it up.

 


5

Something that has not been mentioned

07 Jan 10 12:12

From section 1.1 of the manifest document…..

"Meeting your healthcare needs can be complicated. That is why we want the family doctor to be a patient’s guide throughout the NHS. So we will give GPs the power to hold patients’ budgets and commission care on their behalf – either in hospitals or using other forms of treatment and therapy in GP surgeries or specialist clinics. And we will link GPs’ pay to the quality of the results they deliver."

Now where have we heard that before? Looks like GP Fundholding is about to return. Whoopee! Let’s turn the clock back to 1990.


6

Does this not happen already

11 Jan 10 14:18

"We will put patients in charge of their own health records, with the ability to choose which providers they share them with.”

Does Cameron actually think clinicians will rely on records managed by their patients, so what would be the point?

 

Cameron said: “It’s the patient who’ll have the power in our NHS. You’ll be able to check your health records online in the same way you do your bank account.

Is this not what has been introduced with the Summary Care Record currently being deployed?

It does say the Tories would “unleash an information revolution in the NHS by making detailed data about the performance of trusts, hospitals, GPs, doctors and other staff available to the public online so everyone will know who is providing a good service and who is falling behind.”

Do elements of this not already exisit within the Patient Choices Web Site?

 

It says the party would give GPs the power to hold patients’ budgets and commission care on their behalf and create an independent NHS board to allocate resources to different parts of the country.

Again, is this not practice based commissioning - already in place, granted not for everything

 

No originality....

Search
News Features Jobs Newsletters
EHI Tweets HIMSS10’
EHI Tweets HIMSS10’
Most commented
Most commented
Tags
Tags
Top jobs
More
Top jobs

Featured_recruiters
Featured_recruiters