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18 May 2011

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Battle for the NHS!

March to save the NHS 17 May 2011, photo Paul Mattsson

March to save the NHS 17 May 2011, photo Paul Mattsson   (Click to enlarge)

David Cameron has made clearer than ever what side he's on regarding the NHS. "It is because I love the NHS so much that I want to change it," he said.
This speech spelt out that only very minor compromises, if any, will be made to the privatisation agenda in the Health and Social Care Bill during its 'pause' in Parliament.
It has also been revealed that one of his advisers explicitly told a conference in October that the 're-organisation' of the NHS will result in big opportunities for the private sector and that the NHS will become a "state insurance provider, not a state deliverer", showing the real intentions of the Con-Dems.
However, almost half the population supports strikes over public sector cuts. And a survey of 2,000 nurses and midwives in the trade union Unison showed that almost three-quarters are prepared to take industrial action to protect their pensions.
Anger over the NHS is growing and Cameron & Co will have a fight on their hands. Here, an experienced nurse paints a picture of cuts biting hard and working class people suffering.

March to save the NHS, 17 May 201, photo Paul Mattsson

March to save the NHS, 17 May 201, photo Paul Mattsson   (Click to enlarge)

I have been a registered mental health nurse since 1999. I have always worked in the NHS, either in a hospital or in the community. I have worked at staff nurse and team manager level (similar to ward sister). I now work as a community mental health nurse due to redeployment after my service was cut to save money.

The current round of cuts is hitting working class people the hardest because they generally have no alternative - no private health insurance or access to private health care. So they have to make do with reduced services.

Obviously the cuts also mean that health workers may lose their jobs or may have to work harder in a more stressful environment because of reduced staff levels.

As for this 'pause' that the Con-Dem government talks about, the cuts to the mental health sector are not pausing. My trust plans to make a 4% 'saving' each year for three years. The trust continues to review and cut services as planned previously. The NHS is a big machine to start and stop for brief pauses.

March to save the NHS, photo Paul Mattsson

March to save the NHS, photo Paul Mattsson   (Click to enlarge)

This new programme of giving GPs the money to choose what services they require will not help working class people. GPs already regularly restrict their referrals to specialists to save money. Often it's only when you kick up a stink or when you're in constant agony and can't work that they refer.

I'm sure some GPs might like the power, status and extra perks that the new scheme may bring. But they will have to employ extra staff to administer it all, at a cost. Therefore more money will be spent on admin and less on specialist referrals for patients.

It is not unusual for me to get sent information about my trust's corporate image. Privatisation is already here in the way NHS trusts conduct themselves. Most NHS trust services are more 'competitive' at the moment as they have the infrastructure - staff, buildings etc. But it cannot be long before, say a big supermarket chain, puts in a more competitive bid because they will probably hire less expensive, less qualified staff on much worse terms and conditions.


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In The Socialist 18 May 2011:


Socialist Party workplace news

Strike back at pensions robbery!

Fight all the cuts - come to the NSSN conference


Socialist Party NHS campaign

Battle for the NHS!

Derriford hospital announces huge cuts


Socialist Party editorial

Crisis deepens in the eurozone


Socialist Party news and analysis

The Hardest Hit march and rally

Teachers' strike stops job cuts

Iraq war: Labour's lie machine

Pay gap grows ever wider

News in brief


Socialist Party feature

Britain now facing crisis on all fronts


International socialist news and analysis

Northern Ireland: The 'no change' elections


Socialist Party workplace news

UCU at the crossroads on pensions

CWU conference: Support joint union action on 30 June

BA dispute: Mass meeting votes to put latest agreement to membership

Workplace news in brief


Socialist Party youth and students

Con-Dems: Supporting Youth Enslavement

Yorkshire Youth Fight for Jobs regional conference


Socialist Party feature

Tory cuts hit children and young people

Teachers strike and parents picket at Shorefields

Campaigners put pressure on Lambeth council


Comment

The difference a union makes


 

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Related links:

NHS:

triangleReaders' opinion

triangleNottingham NHS pay protest

triangleCovid, capitalism and mental health

triangleFor a fighting, democratic, member-led union to stop the austerity attacks

triangleHands off our NHS

Cuts:

triangleRMT: Militant industrial and political strategy must be fought for

triangleCan the 'Preston model' beat the cuts?

triangleFight the rotten establishment

triangleWhat councils can do to protect the environment

Nurses:

triangleOverwhelmed, underfunded, underpaid, and still fighting for safe PPE

triangleSuper-rich tax evasion costs 34 million nurses worldwide

triangleNHS: Underfunded, understaffed, underpaid

Health:

triangleBeal school strikers suspend action after possible victory

triangleSt Mungo's workers walkout

Midwives:

triangleReverse the GP cuts

Mental health:

triangleWaltham Forest Socialist Party: A socialist response to the mental health crisis

Article dated 18 May 2011

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