Labour's Shadow Health Secretary promises return to NHS values (From The Northern Echo)
For details on how to contact our editorial and commercial departments, click here
Labour's Shadow Health Secretary promises return to NHS values
7:41pm Thursday 21st February 2013 in News
By Barry Nelson, Health Editor
GIVING VIEWS: Andy Burnham speaks at the meeting
LABOUR'S Shadow Health Secretary told supporters in the North-East on Thursday night that he would put "the N back into the NHS."
Speaking at a public meeting in Redcar organised by Labour Party candidate, Anna Turley, Andy Burnham, MP, strongly criticised the Coalition Government for "fragmenting" the NHS at the worst possible time.
He said the Coalition had "no democratic mandate" for the massive reorganisation which was costing 3bn and diverting much-needed resources away from the front line.
Mr Burnham told the packed meeting that he was very concerned at reports of long queues of ambulances outside James Cook University Hospital in Middlesbrough and delays in admitting patients at A&E units across the North-East.
He said he would fight the Government's attempts to open up the NHS to market forces and - if he was in power - would restore the NHS as a truly national and collaborative health service.
Mr Burnham warned that the controversial new structure of the NHS which comes into effect in April would lead to fragmentation and a postcode lottery of services.
He said he is now working on a new policy which would try to bring health care, mental health care and social care into a single service.
Such a service could more adequately deal with the growing problem of an ageing Britain, he said.
Mr Burnham argued that more resources should be allocated to supporting the very elderly at home.
But he warned that this would probably mean that hospitals would have to shrink.
Mr Burnham said he could not promise to increase NHS spending but he argued that bringing the three services together could result in major economies and a better service.
"Statistics show that a quarter of beds in acute hospitals are occupied by older people who shouldnt be there but they cant be discharged because theres no provision for them at home."
An unnamed nurse told Mr Burnham that the main problem facing the nursing profession was the lack of staffing on wards.
The nurse, who did not give the name of the hospital involved, told Mr Burnham: "I now work in general practice but my ex-colleauges have told me they are halving the staff on an elderly care ward. To me that is ridiculous."
More NHS & Health News
- Nursing union criticises new threat to privatise community services
- Survey finds a majority of North-East GPs are facing restrictions on new drugs
- Mock clinical trial highlights benefits of trying new drugs or treatment
- Public consultation over planned hospital changes gets under way
- Campaign tells patients that it is 'OK to ask' about clinical trials
- Maggie's Cancer Support comes to the North-East
- Ex-footballer urges everyone to bring dementia out into the open
- Poster girls promote NHS careers
- Study aims to discover whether special insoles can help MS patients walk
- Genetic medicine unit now seeing 800 new cases a year in bid to prevent inherited cancers
Comments(3)
spragger
says...
9:15pm Thu 21 Feb 13
Him, Johnson & Hewitt were all Health Secretaries whilst the MidStaffs tragedy was underway!
- Proving the NHS is far from safe in Labours hands.
- Why should we believe him this time when he has not apologised for the 1200 deaths
- He should be facing criminal charges, like the Chief Exec Nicholson
johnny_p
says...
11:10pm Thu 21 Feb 13
Still, nice to see the economy picking up now and unemployment falling. Roll on the next election.....
PaulMJohnson says...
7:53pm Thu 21 Feb 13
Of the type the last government created, which lead to the deaths of hundreds in mid-Staffordshire?
For all the endless bad mouthing of the private sector, at least if we had some choice in the health service we would be able to take our "business" away from hospitals that put the needs of the staff ahead of the needs of the patients.