Tuesday 8 October 2013

Why Jeremy Hunt wants to cut our pay further (and what we should do about it)

Read this great analysis from Grumbling Appendix alongside this post for a full overview of what lies behind Jeremy Hunt's decision.

Jeremy Hunt, the Minister for Health, has spoken out against the 1% pay rise proposed by the NHS Pay Review Body for NHS staff, and has proposed that NHS staff should not receive any increase, and instead the money "saved" should be spent on "modernisation" of the existing pay structure.
The withdrawl of the pay rise is getting the most coverage, but the main issue is actually the "modernisation" which the government wants to implement.
We do not receive automatic pay rises
At present NHS employees, like many in the public sector, receive what are called increments. This is an incremental pay increase for every year of service, roughly 3.5% per year which moves you from the bottom of your pay band to the top, over a period of about 10 years. After 10 years service, you've reached the top of your pay band, and further pay increases only come with promotion to a higher band or when the government grants them to the whole NHS. Which they haven't for two years, and don't want to do now.

Friday 13 September 2013

Proposal for a Health worker Website and Bulletin

This is a proposal for the creation of a cross-union health worker activist website and accompanying bulletin, as a necessary element in the development of organisation and politicisation among health workers in Britain. Its purpose would be to aid the development of a network of activists in the health service which can begin to act to transform our unions, spur action against privatisation and cuts, and lay the foundation for the unified national resistance needed to stop the destruction of the NHS as part of the Tory austerity project. 

The level of organisation among health workers in Britain is currently incredibly low. Despite huge attacks, resistance remains fragmented and none of the health unions are putting forward a comprehensive plan of how to reverse the privatisation, secure wage rises or stop the cuts. Health workers are increasingly politicised due to the blatant wage gouging and corporate thievery demonstrated by the government and private health systems taking over NHS services, but there are few organisations for this politicisation to flow into and serve as an outlet for action.

Wednesday 21 August 2013

How many reports highlighting staff shortages does the government need before it takes the one concrete action that would make a huge difference?

An article I wrote for Our NHS, with some additional reporting by Caroline Molley.
A shortage of nursing staff has been a chronic problem in the NHS since its inception - and it is getting worse. 
The last few months have seen a stream of reports into poor patient care - first Francis, last month Keogh, and yesterday Professor Don Berwick’s report into patient safety. Each highlights the problem of lack of staff, particularly nurses.
Yesterday Berwick recommended that new guidance to protect patients against “the dangers of inadequate staffing” be set up “as soon as possible.”
It also emerged yesterday that Sir Robert Francis - author of the landmark report into mid-Staffordshire - is now calling for a “benchmark” level of staffing, “below which you cannot be safe”. 
Francis’s intervention is significant because his February report shied away from recommending mandatory minimum ratios of nurses to patients. He told concerned healthcare professionals and patients last week that he had seen evidence that persuaded him to revisit the issue.

Tuesday 9 July 2013

We Defend Universal Health Care

Statement by NHS workers opposed to the government's plans to charge non-EU migrants for use of the NHS

We completely oppose the proposals from Health Secretary Jeremy Hunt to charge non-EU migrants for using the NHS.


When the NHS was created on 5th July 1948, one of its founding principles was universal health care. This meant that everyone in Britain had the same access to the health service. Nye Bevan explicitly refuted the argument that foreign visitors should not benefit from the health service funded by UK taxation.

Bevan wrote "How do we distinguish a visitor from anybody else? Are British citizens to carry means of identification everywhere to prove that they are not visitors? What began as an attempt to keep the Health Service for ourselves would end by being a nuisance to everybody. The whole agitation has a nasty taste. Instead of rejoicing at the opportunity to practice a civilized principle, Conservatives have tried to exploit the most disreputable emotions in this among many other attempts to discredit socialized medicine."

Discriminating against non-EU migrants is racist. It is completely contrary to the medical ethics of clinical staff. On public health grounds, the proposals are a disaster. Health professionals do not want illness to go undiagnosed. They want everyone in Britain to feel encouraged to access treatment, in their own interest and in the interest of everyone's health.
The Conservative-LibDem Coalition's proposal to charge non-EU migrants for NHS care is a cynical attempt to divert people's attention from the real source of the problems affecting the health service. It is also the thin end of a thick wedge.


Monday 24 June 2013

The real reasons why A&E departments are bursting at the seams

This is an excellent article by Dr Clive Peedell about why A&E services are in crisis.
By Dr Clive Peedell, co-leader of the National Health Action Party
A&E services across England are in crisis, with the Director of Patient safety at NHS England, Mike Durkin, admitting that patients are likely to have been harmed. Health Secretary Jeremy Hunt is trying to pin the blame on GPs. He points to contract changes nearly a decade ago which took responsibility for out-of-hours cover away from GPs. This argument is illogical. How could an event in 2004 cause a sudden crisis in 2013? And, obviously, it was not GPs who designed these changes but the Department of Health, influenced by private sector lobbyists wanting to privatise out-of-hours services.
This scapegoating of GPs suggests that Mr Hunt and the Coalition Government are desperate to distance themselves from blame for the NHS system collapse they themselves have caused.
In summary, there are five main factors which are fuelling England’s A&E crisis after a period of record satisfaction with NHS services just three years ago: massive cuts by successive governments of hospital bed numbers which mean patients end up stuck in A&E beds and can’t be moved onto wards; a lack of community care resources leading to hospital bed blocking; inadequate out-of-hours GP-replacement services; the use of unqualified staff at call centres to screen patients and advise if and where to seek treatment; and the closure of A&E departments. All form part of the overall NHS privatisation set out in last year’s controversial Health and Social Care Act.

Sunday 16 June 2013

UNISON National Executive Council Elections 2013 - Health Results

We lost.

That’s the short of it. None of the socialist candidates for Health seats on the NEC were elected. This is a blow, but to be expected given the level of activism UNISON encourages of its membership, how the union is run and the low horizons and expectations this creates, and the level of participation by members in the unions limited democratic structures. I’d like to thank everyone who put in the hard work leafleting hospitals and other NHS services to get the vote out. We did alright, and there valid reasons beyond our control for the result. There is also a lot we can improve on to make sure we stand a chance of winning next time. More on that in another post. Now for some analysis of the result.

Saturday 27 April 2013

UNISON Health Conference 2013

I attended UNISON Health Conference in Glasgow earlier in the week as a visitor. As anyone reading the blog would hopefully be aware, I'm standing for election to the NEC of UNISON as part of a Left slate, so I attended to meet members, observe the debates and pick up support. I also attended to raise the profile of the 4:1 Campaign which myself and several nursing colleagues are involved it, which is campaigning for mandatory minimum staffing levels in the NHS.

The response to the 4:1 campaign was really positive. Many attendees grabbed the leaflets when they saw the title and agreed that mandatory minimums were an absolute necessity, although there was a lot of disbelief as to whether we could win them while the Tories controlled the Department of Health. Several branch officers were interested in the campaign and agreed to circulate the materials to their members and get them involved in the campaign. Hopefully more will get in touch via the website and spread the camapaign amongst union members in the frontline of NHS services. Getting active involvement from staff on the wards will be crucial to seeing the campaign grow and become effective.

You can read more about the campaign here at the website www.4to1.org.uk

The first day of conference was heavy as the main subjects were the events at Mid Staffordshire and the Francis report, and the release of the results of UNISON's survey of nursing staff, which revealed the constant crisis is gripping the NHS as a result of budget cuts and privatisation.

Firstly though.....why did UNISON invite David Nicholson to UNISON Health Conference?!


Sunday 7 April 2013

Brighton Defend the NHS Demo



Yesterday activists from Defend the NHS, The Labour Representation committee and the GMB union organised a demonstration in defence of Brighton NHS. The demonstration was called to coincide with the arrival of Matthew Kershaw as NHS Trust Chief Executive. Kershaw is fresh from his role as Trust Special Administrator at Lewisham where he pushed through plans to close the A&E and Maternity services and close all the acute wards at the hospital, in the face of mass community opposition. I’ve written more about this issue here. I attended the demonstration as I have been active in the campaign to save Lewisham Hospital and wanted to show my solidarity with those in Brighton fighting to defend the NHS and oppose the repellent axe-man that is Kershaw.













Sunday 10 March 2013

Why I am standing for UNISON NEC


I am standing for election as I believe our union needs to radically change its approach to the austerity agenda imposed by the Con-Dem government if we are to survive as a union and protect and improve our NHS. I am standing so that I can help transform our union. I want to develop a much more democratic, activist led union which gives members ways to participate in and control their union, from top to bottom.