Thursday, 8 October 2009

NHS secretly wooed private firms over polyclinics‏

Revealed: NHS secretly wooed private firms over polyclinics 07 Oct 09 By Steve Nowottny Exclusive: The NHS secretly courted private companies at a series of high-level meetings to encourage them to compete for the new wave of polyclinics and GP-led health centres, Pulse can reveal. See Pulse
Directors, chief executives and other senior figures from a who's who of private health providers were invited to regular off-the-record briefings,held every six weeks, to get their advice on tendering and procurement of GP-led health centres and London's polyclinics.

Details of the meetings, at which no minutes were taken, emerged only this week after Pulse successfully won a nine-month appeal under the Freedom of Information Act. Attendees included Atos Consulting, Assura Group, Care UK and Alliance Boots (see below).

The last in the series of meetings, which were hosted by NHS London anddesigned to reassure the private sector about the Government's commitment to opening up the market, was attended by then-health minister Lord Darzi, aswell as UBS Bank, PriceWaterhouse Coopers and Dr David Bennett, whose former roles include head of policy at Number 10 and at influential management consultancy McKinsey.

Companies invited to the meetings subsequently bid for and won contracts fordozens of GP-led health centres around the country and have been among those bidding for London's centres, although NHS London is refusing to reveal how many they have won. But a briefing prepared for Lord Darzi ahead of the last meeting on 19 August 2008 reveals: 'This group of private sector CEOs and senior officials meets roughly every six weeks... to discuss concerns of the private sectormarket in general but specifically issues relating to London polyclinics andhow London is handling GP-led health centres.

'It is now a forum for the market to offer opinions and advice in the run-upto tendering and procurement of primary care services through both models.' The briefing adds that one function of the meetings is to ensure the NHS isaware of the confidence required to ensure City backing for any 'ventures'in primary care.

'Lord Darzi will be aware the City has grown deeply sceptical about marketsin health given the reversal of much of the wave two independent sector treatment centre procurement,' the report adds.

LMCs responded angrily to news of the meetings, pointing out that GPs hadnot been invited to similar meetings. Dr Michelle Drage, joint chief executive of Londonwide LMCs, said: 'We've had our suspicions but it confirms everything we thought must be going on. It stinks - it's appalling.'

Dr Drage said London wide LMCs had found it impossible to organise meetings with NHS London at a similar level to the private sector briefings. 'I've had one such meeting in the past year, with the chief executive,' she said.

Dr Nigel Watson, chair of the GPC sub committee on commissioning and service development, said: 'To brief them like this is blatant and seems very strange when everyone is talking about level playing fields.'

And Dr Sally Whittet, a GP in Lambeth, south London, added: 'This is wrong.It goes against my idea of the NHS.' However a Department of Health spokesperson said: 'The accusation that private companies were 'secret wooed' is simply untrue. We have repeatedly made clear that in setting up GP health centres PCTs are expected to carry out an open and transparent procurement to ensure the fullest range of providers can bid including existing GP practices, voluntary and independent sector providers.'

He added: 'Lord Darzi spent a year working on his review of the NHS andengaged with over 60,000 people - the majority of whom were frontline NHSstaff, patients and members of the public. However, given their interests in the future direction of the NHS this also included private sector health care providers.'

Companies represented at the meetings - . Alliance Boots. Atos Consulting . Assura Group . Ashley House . Care UK. General Healthcare Group . HCA International . Nuffield Hospitals . PWC . UBS . Read the documents in full
http://www.pulsetoday.co.uk/story.asp?sectioncode=23&storycode=4123871&c=2