Health minister Professor Lord Ara Darzi published the report of his wide-ranging review of the NHS in June 2008. His High Quality Care For All report set "a new foundation for a health service that empowers staff and gives patients choice. It ensures that healthcare will be personalised and fair, include the most effective treatments within a safe system, and help patients to stay healthy".
The NHS Confederation believes Lord Darzi's proposals will enable a major improvement in the quality of care and patient experience, as long as the local NHS is given the space to make the changes.
Implementation
Our priority is to ensure implementation of the review delivers real and sustainable benefits for patients, the public and NHS staff. We particularly welcome:
- the focus on defining quality, measurement and incentives to support this
- the absence of major restructuring
- a permissive and experimental approach to more controversial areas
- the broad consistency with existing policy
- the emphasis on prevention as well as treatment services.
Our Taking forward the NHS Next Stage Review working paper gives our overall view of the review, along with an analysis of the key issues arising from it and our views on the priorities for action. The paper is informed by discussion with NHS Confederation members at our Council meeting on 22 July and we are continuing to collate views from networks and members. Email nigel.edwards@nhsconfed.org with your views.
Vision for primary and community care
On 3 July the Department of Health published its vision for primary and community care as part of the NHS Next Stage Review, setting out the future direction for primary and community care in England. NHS Confederation chairman, Bryan Stoten, said: "This strategy presents opportunities for partners across primary care to work together to improve patient care and this is something that clinicians will be keen to engage with. We know people increasingly want a greater say in their health services and control of their own care."
Informatics review
The Department of Health published the report of its health informatics review on 10 July, part of the NHS Next Stage Review. The health informatics review set out to:
- assess the supply of, and demand for, information across the NHS and social care
- make sure that, five years after the commissioning of the National Programme for IT (NPfIT), the framework for the NHS Care Records Service and the Secondary Uses Services (SUS) is in line with recent, current and potential future policy
- to ensure that the governance of informatics within the NHS and the Department of Health (DH) is clear and appropriate.
Our 2008 Health Informatics Review briefing for members sets out the key points.
The NHS Constitution
Our NHS Constitution briefing for members summarises the main points of the Government's consultation on a new constitution for the NHS.
Influencing the NHS Next Stage Review
The NHS Confederation worked hard to influence the review, working closely with the review team to feed through views and facilitate discussion with members. We submitted detailed comments in August 2007 and January 2008, and senior NHS Confederation representatives took part in the review's national working groups.
Our Challenges for Darzi report in May 2008 highlighted the ideas we believed could make the biggest difference. And, to assess whether new policy is likely to produce good outcomes for patients and the public, the report includes a set of tests as a framework for assessing and developing it.
Review reading
- Taking forward the NHS Next Stage Review (August 2008) sets out our overall view of the review, along with an analysis of the key issues arising from it and our views on the priorities for action.
- Read our July 2008 briefing for members which summarises Professor Lord Darzi's report and sets out the Confederation viewpoint.
- The NHS Constitution briefing for members (July 2008) outlines the key points of the Government's consultation.
- Our May 2008 Challenges for Darzi report highlights some of the ideas we believe could make the biggest difference in making the review outcomes successful. But it warns that Lord Darzi must learn the lessons of previous poor policy making to ensure that NHS reform delivers real and sustainable benefits for patients and NHS staff.
- Local reports from the review are expected in summer 2008, but Professor Lord Darzi's May 2008 Leading local change report pledged that changes will be transparent and driven by the best evidence. Commenting on its publication, NHS Confederation policy director, Nigel Edwards, said: "We need to recognise that the substantial challenges around service change on the ground will not be overcome by clear guidance alone."
- In April 2008 we published Ideas from Darzi: polyclinics, a look at polyclinics, the key design rules for them and three possible models. This report also outlines key lessons learned, and the misconceptions and concerns associated with them.
- We produced a summary for members of Lord Darzi's October 2007 interim review report.
- Our paper Key issues for the Next Stage Review picked out a number of areas where NHS organisations believe that a change in policy or approach would have a significant impact on the success of the overall reform programme.
- Healthcare for London: a framework for action briefing looks at the key findings and recommendations from Professor Lord Darzi's 2007 review of healthcare in London, his vision for the future and the national implications.
Darzi interim report
4 October 2007 - Summary