Thursday, 20 February 2014

Treasury intervention at Papworth prioritizes debt over saving lives‏

As a recent double-lung transplant patient I was shocked to read that Papworth hospital is under threat of closure from the Treasury.  As the UK’s largest cardiothoracic hospital, it is one of only seven hospitals in the UK that performs heart and/or lung transplants, and, with the exception of Harefield (where I had my surgery), has almost double the number of patients in after-care then its nearest rival.

Yet this hospital’s vital and successful role in the UK’s delivery of transplants, amongst other essential services, is now at risk. The Government is demanding yet another review about moving Papworth services in part or in entirety to Peterborough City hospital, to help bail out the latter from its crippling debts. This comes despite the fact Peterborough’s debts are entirely unconnected to Papworth, which is one of the NHS’s strongest financial performers.

Transplants are incredibly complex procedures that need highly experienced clinical teams and specialized equipment for the surgery, and before and after care. It isn’t an exaggeration to say that the excellence behind these established teams is keeping people alive for longer.

Katherine Graham, who received a heart and lung transplant at Papworth last September, said: “I have seen at first hand the amazing work and dedication of staff and have received first class care at all times.” This personal experience is reflected in the hospital’s Friends and Family test score of 85%, the highest in East Anglia.

Yet Graham believes that a move to Peterborough “would result in diluting our care and the expertise that has already been achieved at Papworth and would jeopardize our futures.”  She’s right to be concerned. In addition to being debt-laden, in its most recent Care Quality Commission (CQC)  inspection Peterborough hospital failed to meet two essential standards, including providing appropriate care for its patients.

Back in July 2010, when the Government published its white paper on its intended radical NHS reforms, the foreword, signed by Cameron, Clegg and then-health minister, Lansley, said:
“Patients will be at the heart of everything we do. So they will have more choice and control, helped by easy access to the information they need about the best GPs and hospitals. Patients will be in charge of making decisions about their care.”

Controversially patient choice was intended to create a market in healthcare in which hospitals with excellent standards of care would thrive as more patients chose to attend them, while those who gave poorer care would be left to close if they couldn’t attract more patients by improving their services, and therefore gaining increased funding.

There are huge problems with designing healthcare provisions on this model, not least the fact that the poorest or most ill patients have less capability to travel far for treatment, but the Treasury’s intervention over Papworth undermines the reforms’ positive focus on patient experience as it is perversely penalizing one hospital for being successful and rewarding the other for failure.

Yet it is evocative of the future direction the Government is taking with hospital restructuring. Still brooding after appeal court judges ruled it acted illegally in cutting A&E and maternity services at London’s Lewisham hospital, the Government is pushing a critical amendment to the Health care bill through parliament. It would allow administrators to force changes upon financially viable hospitals which neighbour failing hospitals, without the need to consult patients or doctors.

It is a fallacy to say that patients will have any real influence over NHS spending when services at their local or chosen hospitals can be closed without clinical justification, or, in many cases, when closure would actual harm outstanding care. The drive for improved health standards that patient choice was meant to champion cannot succeed if hospitals which provide excellent care are seconded to those that have the highest debts.

I am incredibly grateful to the NHS and the team at Harefield who helped give me back my life through a transplant. I would be devastated if my friends’ chances of getting the same life-changing opportunity at Papworth are jeopardised by this Government’s chaotic and unfair attitude to hospital reorganization which prioritizes reducing debt over saving lives.

4 comments:

  1. Hi Sharon, I'm Lindsey! I have a question and would love to speak with you about your medical procedures. Could you please email me when you have a free minute? I'd really appreciate, and I look forward to talking soon!

    lindseyDOTcaldwellATrecallcenterDOTcom

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  2. This is an interesting post. Despite of all the controversy faced by the NHS, it is serving people in the best possible way. In order to get help with the doctors appraisal, licencetopractise.co.uk offer professional services.

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