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Commissioning a Patient Led NHS
Commissioning a Patient Led NHS
Commissioning a Patient Led NHS
Commissioning a Patient Led NHS
(Published October 2005)
Commissioning a Patient Led NHS by
Michael Sobanja
Another NHS Reorganisation was launched by the
publication of the Departmental guidance issued on 28 July 2005 entitled
?Commissioning a Patient Led NHS?. The expected reconfiguration of Primary Care
Trusts is now under way, with proposals to be submitted by Strategic Health
Authorities by 15 October, but there were also a few surprises in the notably
the separation of commissioning and providing at PCT level (see below). But
what are we to make of this, and what are the implications for the
pharmaceutical industry?
The first comment I would make is that this is
one of the new breed of letters from the Department of Health (DH) that is
short and to the point. We have become accustomed to the long, rambling type of
guidance and I think the new shorter versions are to be preferred. Some do not
? where is the detail they ask, what about x or y? I think they miss the point
? if we want a DH that?s sets the direction of travel after shifting the
balance of power then keep it brief ? take responsibility at the front line and
develop this policy in a way that suits local needs and circumstances. Asking
the DH to provide yet more guidance only encourages micro-management and should
be avoided. It does mean that we have to take the principles and put some meat
on the bones ourselves ? both in the NHS and outside.
Turning to the
content, the following are the main proposals:
? Merger of PCTs ?
probably down to something like 100 ? 150 with role of both strategic
commissioner and performance manager ? welcome back District Health Authorities
some would say, but this interpretation would fail to recognise the new bodies
will have different roles in both ?holding the ring? and supporting practice
based commissioning in the future. Indeed, if the new PCTs turn out to be old
DHAs then the objective of this change will have been missed.
?
The 28 Strategic Health Authorities to be reduced to about nine ? probably to
match the existing Government office of the Regions. Curiously, the SHAs to
continue ? but for how long? ? I wouldn?t mind putting money on their being
adsorbed into the Government Offices for the Regions in the next five
years.
? Practice Based Commissioning (PBC) to be 100%
implemented by the end of 2006. Of course, there is some ambiguity about the
definition of PBC and therefore this could be easy or hard to achieve ? and at
the moment the DH won?t come clean about whether they mean real budget holding
or simply information provision to a practice level. At its most extreme ? the
full delegation and control of budgets to practices seems impossible to achieve
and we might all expect the target to be interpreted in a less demanding
way.
? PCTs to lose their provider functions by 2008. Currently
some PCTs are big employers, running not only community services but also some
hospitals. These services are to be separated off into new bodies (the
re-emergence or community trusts?) or even the private sector. In any event,
community services are to be subject to contestability which in reality means
market testing. Welcome back to the internal market ? or not perhaps? This has
produced perhaps the most widespread reaction with some saying that the
separation of commissioner and provider functions at PCT ? but not Practice,
level is intellectually incoherent. In reality ? this is about focussing PCTs
on their main task ? and in any event, separation of commissioning and
provision becomes increasingly nonsensical the nearer the patient the
organisation is. Perhaps we should focus on what works and not intellectual
neatness.
? All NHS Trusts to move to Foundation status by
2008
? Ambulance trusts to be reduced considerably ? subsequently
proposals have been produced which will result in the creation of 11 merged
ambulance trusts
The real driver in all of this is to make a reality of
commissioning which has hardly delivered the goods after nearly fifteen years
on from being introduced into the NHS lexicon. It is about time we ended
provider capture, focussed on what patients and populations need and enabled
commissioners to lead the NHS. The rest then follows ? and is consistent with
the previous policy and results in a full-blown market for the NHS ? and I
would predict that primary care is next. We shall wait for the White
Paper?
Thinking about the Pharmaceutical Industry, the implications are
now pretty clear in the short term, but the shake down will take some time to
settle in the new customer environment. Those implications
include:
? A customer environment that becomes increasingly
inward looking in the short term, with individuals concern being set on
personal survival. Access from, attention to, external organisations will
become more difficult.
? In the longer term, the fragmentation of
commissioning presents a real challenge to those who seek to influence them ?
more and new customers with the potential for different requirements and
policies.
? More and different types of providers, with a variety
of traditional NHS and independent sector providers ? more difficult to treat
as a single customer. The ability of the pharmaceutical company to enter the
market as a service provider may present real opportunity.
? With
greater specification of services will become more standardisation of treatment
and prescribing. Great if you have an ?approved? product ? but pretty limiting
if you don't.
? A customer environment which becomes more
focussed on costs ? driven by tariffs and legally binding contracts with real
competition. As pressure on costs bite ? some providers will go to the wall:
others will increasingly look to pressurise their cost base ? including
prescribing costs ? to survive.
? An increasing opportunity for
the industry to bring offereings to customers that build upon their own
expertise of business and business models ? information handling, supply chain
management, performance management and so on ? the NHS is going to be hungry
for those techniques which it has (often) previously ignored.
? A
need to stay in touch with a rapidly changing environment over the next few
years ? the need for customer market information and understanding has never
been greater.
Here we go again?
Michael Sobanja is the Chief
Executive of the NHS Alliance and a Non Executive Director of Health Direction
Ltd
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