Select Committee on Health Minutes of Evidence


Examination of Witnesses (Questions 140-159)

THURSDAY 6 FEBRUARY 2003

MS JOAN ROGERS, MR NIK PATTEN, MS MOIRA BRITTON, MRS CHRIS WILLIS, MR KEN JARROLD CBE, MR DAVID JACKSON, DR IAN RUTTER OBE AND MR PETER DIXON

Julia Drown

  140. Have any of you in your contacts with officials or in your application so far got a clearer idea about what these other freedoms are besides the financial ones we have discussed? Mr Jackson mentioned earlier that he was hoping for the freedom not to have to do Modern Matrons but you are going to have to do health and safety and I understand all the same information is going to need to be sent in centrally. There is no indication that is changing. Have you had any indications of what other sorts of freedoms you might have?
  (Ms Rogers) If you ask them for freedoms, they are very chary because this is a very conservative way of working—I mean that apolitically. It might sound naive, but there is the freedom in the "how" you do something as opposed to the "what". They are quite clear that we are stuck with all the targets as before and that quite bothers me. If you had a foundation community, you might go for a different target. Chris might want more money on children's health improvement through SureStart than six-month access time. You might let that float a month and we cannot do that, those are a given. What David was referring to was the kind of really tight bureaucracy we have. If somebody said to David that they would like him to get quality back into nursing, which has been neglected for 25 years—which it has been; Philip Hunt said that recently—but they left David to think how he would do it, it might have been better than telling him he had to have a modern matron, which is immediately offensive to the males in the profession and leads to all sorts of peculiarities. Similarly, I want a better hospital food panel and I am really quite passionate about it, because nutrition is about healing. Again it got lost because it was dumped down on people saying this is the menu, this is what you have to do. It became Lloyd Grossman's menus and this is how you do it and the NHS plates, as opposed to what it was really meant to be, which was nutrition and healing and standards. When we are talking freedoms, it sounds naive, but it is about how you are allowed to do it, rather than what you are allowed to do.

  141. Do you think you might be given the freedom for the menus, for example.
  (Ms Rogers) A bit of "how" rather than a bit of "what".

  142. The trouble is that a lot of the targets are about the "how to".
  (Ms Rogers) If they are and they do not change that, this would be less and less interesting to us.

Jim Dowd

  143. I want to look at motherhood and apple pie for a moment, or as the department has it in their guide, governance and constitution. Mr Jackson, you say that you would look to secure at least 10,000 registered members from the local community who would elect members to the board of governors. Where on earth did this number come from? It fell from the sky surely?
  (Mr Jackson) I do not think that will be a problem at all. We serve the population of Bradford, which is over 400,000 people. We have over 4,000 members of staff, we have just short of 500 active volunteers. Whenever we have had some kind of local appeal the public in Bradford have come up trumps. There is enormous interest in local hospitals and we said 10,000, but we would be very disappointed if we did not get more than 15,000 members at the first go. It is an act of faith. I cannot prove it, because we have not done the work yet. There is a very real feeling locally that that is a very achievable target.

  144. Do you have no fears that these are going to be the broadsheet readers of various kinds or the producers, trade union members?
  (Mr Jackson) I would not say broadsheet; this is Bradford. I think if you are going for 10,000 to 15,000 people I would expect that the 10,000 to 15,000 members we go for would reflect the local community. Of course within that you are bound to get some people with their own agendas to grind, but on the whole you get people who are genuinely interested in health care, in the hospital, in the future hospital services. I do not think the fringe are going to cause a problem. We will have to see how this works out in practice and will have to put a lot of work into trying to make sure that does not happen.

  145. Are you confident that it would not be dominated by the producer interest rather than the user interest?
  (Mr Jackson) The majority has to be from the general public. A lot of staff will be very interested in the opportunity to be in a position to vote for the board of governors and so on. The framework which has been set and the way we will draft the rule book for this will be to make sure that does not happen. Let us be clear. I want a membership and a board of governors who are interested in health care and interested in the welfare of the hospital and interested in the hospital's role in the wider health economy.

  146. But you cannot ensure it does not happen, because these people will be self-selecting.
  (Mr Jackson) At the end of the day there is an element of democracy here. Yes, of course you are right. I do believe that there are large numbers of people who are genuinely interested in the things I have described and these are the ones who will come forward. I do not think it will attract a lot of people who have other motives.

Andy Burnham

  147. I take a different view. I agree. I think there will be many people who will take a very close interest, particularly we have seen it in areas where there is service reconfiguration and people take an extremely close interest in what is going on at the trust. There is one criticism which calls it a gimmick and another criticism within the health service which sees it as a way of GMB taking control of the hospital and everybody is jumping to a different tune. Do people see any of those criticisms as valid, or would they see, as I do, that it is a way of giving you as health service professionals a different set of people to be accountable to from the ones you are currently accountable to, who are often faceless managers to the public going up the NHS chain whom no-one ever sees. I would hope that it might change your focus, so you are not looking up to Whitehall, you are looking down into your local co-operation. I would think most people in the NHS are slightly chary of that. They think the great unwashed are going to start telling them what to do.
  (Mr Jarrold) Of course there are people in the NHS who have no experience of dealing with democracy. Since 1948, there has never been a system of democratic elections in the NHS. The only form of democracy we ever had—and that was extinguished—was indirect democracy of councillors sitting on health authorities. Even that was extinguished. We have to start not being afraid of the people we serve. Every community has interest groups. Every community has people whose judgements we may not agree with, but that is what democracy is about. It is about time the NHS returned to its democratic roots and they were democratic before 1948, both in local authority hospitals and in voluntary hospitals which attracted the sort of interest from their community which David has been talking about. We must not be afraid of our patients, our carers, our staff and the people we serve. If we are afraid of them, we are dead in the water.

  148. Do you think you will change that accountability, the way you look for accountability? Do you think it will stop people?
  (Dr Rutter) It will change the shift in the "how", but let us not forget that there are some quite hard national targets on which we will be expected to continue to deliver. The how will change very significantly; it will change some of the "what". There will still be in the regulated system we are operating in, some hard national targets which we will clearly have to meet.
  (Mr Dixon) I will probably sound like an old cynic, but I do not believe there is this pent up demand for electoral participation in the NHS. I have worked over a number of years since I have been involved in the health service to try to engage people and it is extremely hard work. The biggest audience I ever saw at any meeting I have been involved in was when my health authority was debating whether or not it was going to abandon a very small contract for homeopathy worth about £50,000 a year. That was the only occasion on which we had a reasonable turnout of people.

  149. One of the things which to me has come clearly out of this morning's session is that the London angle may have a different perspective on foundation status than others.
  (Mr Dixon) Yes, that is possible

  Andy Burnham: I see a fine community with a trust which is serving that community where they feel a sense of loyalty that the more transient population of London perhaps does not feel. What we might have teased out a bit is that it might mean something different to a community where it is very—

Chairman

  150. I have another perspective on this to put to Mr Dixon. Over the years as an MP and prior to that as somebody involved in local politics as a councillor, I have been involved in numerous public consultation exercises with the health service. The reason why the public have this attitude is that in every one of those it was usually a closure or change of use, their clearly argued view was completely ignored.
  (Mr Dixon) Yes; consultation in the health service has been a charade so far, I agree with that.

  151. A joke; an absolute joke as you well know.
  (Mr Dixon) It has been a charade and I am not convinced that this is going to be a better way forward. The reason I say that is that I do think there is a severe risk of "entryism". There is no way I could get an electorate of 10,000 operating in my part of the world and I think that is a fairly common view in London. What I could get undoubtedly is the local Trots or the Hampstead Heath Preservation Society putting up a decent showing, or even the local Conservative Party or local Labour Party.

  152. That is very interesting. The Secretary of State has been accused of being a Trotskyist on the side.
  (Mr Dixon) I think my local MP said he was a Maoist rather than a Trotskyist: constant revolution. There is a real danger that we shall spend an awful lot of time on the mechanics of this without becoming more seriously accountable. The idea that we do spend all our time facing Whitehall and not facing our patients and the various other groups we deal with is a travesty. We really do spend a lot of time trying to engage with users groups, with patients, with local authorities. We really do do that.

Andy Burnham

  153. Do you accept that it might mean something different in Hartlepool or Bradford?
  (Mr Dixon) I am sure they all do it as well. I can only speak for what I found in London, not just central London but outside London. We were merging two hospitals on the fringe of London some years ago. We advertised it all over the place. The biggest degree of participation we got was four people and that was unfortunately typical. Whether or not this produces a complete sea change, I do not know, but I am nervous about jumping into it on the assumption that it will. We certainly need to engage better, but will we? At the moment we are saying that foundation trusts do not have to have a patients' forum. That seems to me a rather strange thing to say. I would welcome a patients' forum, but if I am going to be a foundation, I do not have to have one. All right, I can have one, but it seems to me an odd way of structuring this.

  154. You would not need one if you had an involved membership. You would not need a patients' forum.
  (Mr Dixon) I think we probably would, because a patients' forum is different from anything remotely resembling a stakeholder council or anything else. It is very specific.

Jim Dowd

  155. Is it not the case that the parallel was trying to be drawn with co-operatives, but co-operatives literally, by definition, only serve those who are members? The registered members of any foundation trust will not be a cross section, I suspect that will be the last thing it will be, it will just be a random number of people and yet that institution has to provide a service way beyond that number. We know the volatility of these issues. Dr Taylor sits there as the manifestation and embodiment of how volatile people are. It is only ever around the big monochromatic issues of closure and all the rest of it. I should be amazed if anywhere in the country you could go and get a public meeting to agree to the closure of anything, a hospital notwithstanding. Is it the PCT's responsibility to engage with the public? The PCT has the obligation to provide comprehensive medical services for people in its areas across the field, not just in the acute sector. The acute trusts, foundation or otherwise, are simply trying to claim the same people.
  (Mrs Willis) It is really important that we have this public involvement. I am not sitting here saying we have got it cracked by any stretch of the imagination because it is quite difficult. I go back to an earlier point which I just want to make, which is that I think by having a lot of people involved for NHS managers, we have to endorse everything Ken said. Where it is becoming incredibly difficult is where you have succeeded in having meaningful local democracy and they vehemently disagree with national targets. I am not sure what we do at that point. That is when it is either going to stand or fall.

Chairman

  156. Do you see a clear conflict here?
  (Mrs Willis) Potentially. I am quite clear that some of our local targets and priorities, if you go out to talk to local people, are not necessarily the same as those we are currently putting in a massive amount of effort to access targets. We have to engage the public and one of the ways to do it is not by doing it separately by health. I made reference earlier to working with local authorities. We are co-terminous with the local authority. I sit on the local strategic partnership. We have area boards underneath which have a lot of residents on them. There is the health partnership under that. It is how we join across all the public sectors and have meaningful public involvement. Years ago we had a separate community consultation about areas and when you consult the public they do not just tell you about one thing. Who am I to talk? You probably get this in your surgeries every week. You ask about health and they will talk about street litter and kids hanging around on corners. When you do joined-up community consultations, part of the trick for health is to stop seeing yourself as separate. We are part of the community. There are loads of avenues for getting more public involvement. I am not saying it is cracked because one of the other local concerns is this whole idea of how you get people voluntarily to come forward generally and be involved. There is a massive potential, if we stop looking at it in a health box and just look at it with partners.

Jim Dowd

  157. You have seen the development in recent times of PALS and patient forums and the commission for public involvement. How does the translation system add to that or does it detract from it, as Mr Dixon seemed to be intimating?
  (Mr Jarrold) I do not think we can have too many ways of involving the public. All of this is important. The NHS has traditionally not been good at this and we have a lot to learn from local authorities as to how we relate to the public and how we engage with the public. I believe that we need everything the commission for public and patient involvement will do, the expert patient programme, programmes of the PCTs working with local authorities, the new mechanisms in foundation trusts. We are starting from a very low base in public and patient involvement. I am not concerned about having too many mechanisms. We have a very long way to go before that becomes a reality where patients both feel involved in their own care and able to influence the planning and management of local services. There is a long way to go.

  158. Where is the clamour for this coming from? I have never had a single person come to me and say they feel disengaged from the local hospital. What I do get is a lot of people saying to me that they had to wait three hours in casualty or they have to wait six months to be treated. The only people who talk about democratic deficits are the politicians and professionals. A lot of people do not.
  (Dr Rutter) The real issue of what we are trying to move to is the situation where, instead of variation in health care being determined by professional autonomy, it is actually determined by patient choice. As a professional, it is very, very powerful to have a patient in front of you who will challenge you about the way you organise health care. That is much more challenging and is much more profound than having individual commissioners arguing the point. I have been the point between primary and secondary care sometimes. There is a richness and a focus and a clarity which comes with having patients involved in this process at whatever level. On the point you were making earlier, what we must not do is detract as PCTs from seeing this as our key prime responsibility. Quite clearly it is and it is not just about engaging views, we do need to address the needs of our population as well. Not all demands are the same as the needs of the population. We have a very high incidence of ischaemic heart disease and it would clearly be quite wrong in Bradford not to address that as a key public health issue despite what local residents may feel. There is a silent majority which is clearly dying out there and we need to address those issues. What we need to do is enter into a proper adult relationship with our populace where this is about informing people about the issues, giving them understanding, allowing them to make informed decisions. What we have done so far in health care, it seems to me, is that we have treated patients as children for the majority of the time and they ought to be grateful for what we give them.
  (Ms Britton) What we are saying is that we acknowledge we do not have this right at the moment and we will not quickly get it right. We will continue to improve. What we are probably going to have to do is to accept that we shall have to remain very flexible about accepting the involvement and the input on other people's terms. There will be patients who want to engage and be involved when they are ill. There will be others who when they are well will want to have an involvement. There will be carer groups also which will want to choose when they wish to be involved. There will be people who want to engage when we are looking to develop services, there will be people who want to engage when we might be changing and reducing their services. We shall have to accept imperfection and almost infinite flexibility and allow engagement on other people's terms and demonstrate that to them as a method of communicating to them our commitment to accept their views truly and listen to them. They will test us and they will judge according to how they find us and that is fair enough.

Julia Drown

  159. How many of those here thinking of applying for foundation status would apply if the financial regime were the same and it was just a change in accountability and change in governance arrangements? How many of you would be thinking of applying?
  (Mr Jackson) At the end of the day this is a package and a lot of the detail is not clear yet. The financial arrangements are changing with the financial flows. We are all working through what that will mean in practice. My personal view is that the financial flows approach will be very good for the NHS.


 
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