hoolet issue 48
Spring 2006
Chris Johnstone Intro.
Amazon
Adventure
No Jams
Tomorrow
Three
Theories
Pharmacopœe
Forteana
May The Best Team Win
Zeitgeist
The
Supporter
And
The Winner Is...
A
Different Holy Aisle
Letter
To The Editor
The Last Waltz
By Chris Johnstone
Contact the editor by
e-mail at christopher.johnstone@ntlworld.com
Welcome again to the joys of general practice, as the financial
year crashes to another end. By the time you read this the rush to
finish off the QoF and recruit all those recalcitrant patients will
be over. You may have even received your balancing payment and you
may already be in the pub drowning your guilt at bankrupting the
NHS. If they thought last year was bad, we will show them this year
with higher prevalences and higher achievement figures. No wonder
all the those Health Boards are in such debt, it has all gone to
line the pockets of us fat cat GPs, whose only care is for our bank
balances. So this year we will take a pay cut and accept it
quietly. However the consultants, who really did get a good deal
out of their pay package, only get their pay rise staggered, as we
did for many years and they go bonkers. Calling the government mean
minded and generally bad eggs. Where were our guys when we were
having our pay cut?
Our nnGMS contract reduces the money we get for points unless we
get full marks and full marks are extended for some of the targets.
We have had removed some of the easier achievements as too many of
us got them. I only hope that the buggers in the Dept of Health,
who thought GPs did nothing, are eating their hats as they make our
lives more difficult and tortuous. I have been told that many
officials in the health bureaux around Britain have little idea
what happens in general practice and generally assume we are no
better than incompetent consultants who fell off a pathetic
hospital career ladder. Having had the first set of QoF
achievements they are realising that we are a little more whizzy
than they originally thought. I have no problem with this as long
as they don't punish their ignorance by taking away what we have
earned fair and square.
The end of March also bought an odd experience to myself and the
other 300 GPs and 1000s of other health professionals in Argyll and
Clyde as our Health Board finally sank. We were rescued by the SS
Glasgow or SS Highland, depending on your Local Authority. It is
not an experience I wish to go through again and I would not wish
it upon anyone else, but I fear you may all go through it sooner
rather than later under this government. I am quite involved in our
LHCC and I have an interest in how our CHP will turn out. Our CHP
has been very delayed due to the local politics and Argyll and
Clyde's Clinical Strategy, which was a euphemism for saving some of
the $60 million plus overspend. Part of this involved closing a
variety of hospitals. They in turn quite rightly defended their
right to exist and appealed to the Minister of Health. He decided
to abolish Argyll and Clyde on the spot, which had the pleasant
side-effect of delaying indefinitely the closure of a variety of
units and hospitals, much to local councillors' delight.
So many of our changes were put on hold for a year and we
happily wallowed as we wawaited our new masters orders. The first
newsletter from the new Health Board happily welcomes everybody to
the completely new structure, especially those from Argyll and
Clyde who are joining us. So we know who is joining who. All this
has meant that our CHP is not as developed as we would have hoped.
We have not even been approved by the Scottish Executive yet. The
point of this whinge is that lots of experienced professionals have
left for more secure posts. Innovation has been all but totally
stifled as we wait for approval for everything from our new
managers, but we still do not know who most of them are yet. I do
not know how the NHS mangers stay so calm, it drives me crazy. This
really is no way to run a minoge.
So where will it all end? Down South they are heading hell for
leather for an NHS run by private companies. They are determined to
see as many practices as possible run by HMOs, rather than GPs.
They are hiving off operations to outside bodies. They are
rewarding GPs for commissioning and Choose and Book, which all
increase the private companies influence. It will be survival of
the fittest on a very steep evolutionary curve.
In Scotland Andy Kerr has said we will plough a very different
furrow. In the past, Thatcher used Scotland to try out her
policies. Fettes-educated Blair is happy to use England as a petri
dish and see what grows. We will be integrating more with our
social services colleagues, while England privatises. Old Labour
versus New Labour. Old Labour had its heart in the Scottish central
belt and that is where a lot of their Ministers come from. New
Labour has new friends in Bilderburg, Dubya, the IMF and the World
Bank. So we will we gently waltz with Local Authorities, while
England tangos with transnational corporations. So as this
medico-political Strictly Come Dancing comes to a climax, let us
hope that the public vote for the plucky Scots.
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