Posts Tagged ‘Commissioning’

Making secure healthcare secure

Friday, May 27th, 2011

Today Paul Burstow, Care Services Minister, has announced that responsibility for commissioning health services for children and young people in secure Children’s homes and secure training centres is to pass to the NHS. Until now each secure home or centre has commissioned its own health services.

At first glance this makes practical sense. The NHS has had this role for young offender institutions and prisons since 2006. Claims that this will help ensure consistency between each establishment, and continuity of care once the individual leave the secure establishment, seem plausible.

But where precisely within the NHS will this responsibility sit, and for how long? Will it rest with soon-to-be-abolished PCTs or SHAs? Will it then pass to soon-to-be-established GP consortia, or the National Commissioning Board?

There is great uncertainty about the future of health commissioning generally due to the lack of detail in the Health and Social Care Bill, and exacerbated by recent political friction which casts doubt of how much of the bill will survive into law. The practical implementation of today’s announcement will be watched closely for clues as to the future.

Posted by Chris Webb-Jenkins, who specialises in defending claims against education and care providers and their insurers; risk management, stress, information management and child protection issues.

Christ Webb-Jenkins

Chris Webb-Jenkins
0115 976 6175
cwebb-jenkins@brownejacobson.com

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Does bigger mean better? Potentially

Wednesday, August 4th, 2010

David Cameron launched the Conservative vision of a ‘Big Society’ as a central part of their election campaign earlier this year and this week announced the second wave of the NHS strand of this initiative – the Right to Request.

The Right to Request allows primary care staff the right to request to set up social enterprises and this week’s announcement includes 15 new projects which range from increasing access to psychological therapies, improving end of life care and a wider range of children services.

In an era with an increased focus on choice and effective commissioning this move has the potential to encourage the development of projects based on local knowledge. It is conceivable that this in turn may initiate different and new ways of providing personalised health and social care services which deliver greater quality and value for money and support the continued integration of these care pathways from the bottom up.

Emily Birkett

Posted by Emily Birkett
0121 237 3934
ebirkett@brownejacobson.com

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