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Lord Darzi: You Ask The Questions

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  • Lord Darzi: You Ask The Questions

    LORD DARZI: YOU ASK THE QUESTIONS

    The Independent/UK
    Published: 12 November 2007

    The minister with responsibility for improving patient care answers
    your questions, such as 'Are doctors paid too much?' and 'Will we
    ever find a cure for cancer?'

    How many hospitals do you think should be closed? Dan Inson, by email

    My review of the NHS is not about closures - it's about delivering
    high-quality patient care. Any changes to services should be about what
    is best for patients and based on the best clinical evidence. These
    decisions need to be determined by people locally - clinicians, the NHS
    staff, patients and public. Medicine is constantly changing - more and
    more is being done to detect people's health problems earlier. These
    advances mean patients who previously required hospital treatment can
    more frequently be cared for in their homes. As part of my review of
    the NHS, I'm focusing on ways to improve the care patients get as they
    move through the NHS. It's not going to be about buildings or closures.

    Should we bring back matrons? Patricia Niblock, by email

    We already have. After an absence of 30 years, the Government brought
    back matrons in 2002. There are about 2,000 matrons already in post
    and we aim to recruit an additional 3,000 next year. Leadership and
    accountability is very important in the health service - whether a
    matron or anyone else on the clinical team.

    Have you always been a Labour Party supporter? John Swaine, Oxford

    I'm a clinician not a politician but I was honoured to be asked to
    take on this role. I am proud of the unprecedented investment into
    the health service we have witnessed over the past 10 years of this
    government. It has helped transform the NHS for both patients and
    staff. I am now pleased to be part of the team delivering further
    improvements and hope my work will ensure clinicians have a clear
    voice within the Government.

    You want to shift work out of hospitals and into GP surgeries - but GPs
    complain of being overworked. How will you square that circle? Simon
    Mills, Windsor

    GP practices are the front door to the NHS and where most care already
    takes place. Increasingly, work that used to take place in hospitals
    can now be done nearer to where people live - in their communities or
    even their home. That's good for patients and helps hospitals focus
    on the specialist care they need to deliver. As we transform how care
    is delivered, we will need to be more creative about deploying our
    clinical specialists better.

    This isn't just about GPs. I would like to see more of a role for
    nurses in helping to support people with long-term conditions such
    as diabetes. And I'd also like to see consultants going out into the
    community and holding local clinics..

    Do you want to see more private companies providing GP and hospital
    services Fiona Hamilton, Acton

    I'm keen to see services improved for patients. Who provides the
    service doesn't matter - as long they deliver services to NHS standards
    and provide good value to the taxpayer. Competition in the health
    service can be a good thing - I've seen it help drive up standards
    and offer patients increased choice.

    Had you been in charge five years ago, with the benefit of hindsight,
    what single change would you have made that could have created a
    stronger NHS?

    Kate Pearse, Ashford

    While a lot has been done to improve the NHS over the past decade,
    it is clear more could have been done to engage staff. Some of the
    changes have not been fully supported by medical professionals, because
    government has focused on the means, and not the end - the quality of
    patient care. We know that for change to be truly effective requires
    clinical engagement and leadership. Part of my role is to ensure we
    place clinicians at the heart of the decision-making process.

    More conditions are treated with drugs or minor interventions instead
    of surgery. Will there ever be a time when surgeons become redundant,
    Andy Mason, Hampstead

    As a practising surgeon, I certainly hope not. Even with innovative
    developments in drug treatments and care moving closer to people's
    homes, there are certain conditions that will always require surgery.

    My team and I have developed techniques for less invasive procedures -
    such as keyhole surgery - which is better for patients but actually
    requires greater surgical expertise. While the role will continue
    to change, there will always be an integral role for surgeons in
    our system.

    Why are medical jobs being given to those from overseas when there are
    qualified British doctors who are unable to gain employment? Ashwin
    Ramamurthy, by email

    Overseas doctors have made and continue to make a huge contribution
    to the NHS over the years. Indeed, for most of its history the NHS
    has relied upon the contribution of doctors who trained outside
    Europe. However, we have a responsibility to ensure qualified
    British doctors are able to gain employment and this is something
    the Government are looking at carefully.

    You work at a university. Do you think the new electronic system for
    assessing new doctors is flawed? John Brewin, Cambridge

    While the principles that led us to modernise medical careers were
    absolutely right, there were some veryserious issues with how the
    scheme was implemented. I know it's been very difficult for junior
    doctors - I saw some of my brightest students struggle to get the
    jobs they deserve. The Government was right to apologise for the
    distress caused.

    Do you think everyone should automatically be an organ donor, unless
    they opt out? Francis Walker, London

    We know there is a shortage of organ donors and the Government is
    trying to improve the situation. We have the organ donation task
    force to look at the issue of presumed consent. They will be taking
    into account as many different views as possible.

    With the news that cancer can be avoided by a good lifestyle, should
    the Government do more to make people lead healthier lives Henry
    Anderson, Hounslow

    While a lot is down to the individual, the Government has a role in
    supporting people to make healthy choices. That is why we introduced
    a smoking ban and are working on an obesity strategy. I've also asked
    the clinicians working with me to look at how we can help people
    stay healthy.

    In the battle against MRSA, isn't deep cleaning hospitals missing
    the point?

    Neil Moreton, by email

    For the fight against MRSA to be effective requires a multi-faceted
    strategy. The deep-clean programme is part of a wider range
    of measures, such as screening patients before they come into
    hospital, that we are asking all hospitals to take to ensure we
    reduce healthcare-acquired infections and improve the safety of our
    patients. The NHS is taking this issue very seriously and we will
    work with all our hospitals to ensure we reduce infection and increase
    patient confidence.

    What is the main complaint you hear from patients about the
    NHS? Richard Baker, Farringdon

    Patients have told me that they sometimes feel like a number in the
    system rather than a person. We need to make the patient experience
    as personal as possible and I have made this a priority.

    At £110,000 a year, are GPs being paid too much? Jeff Porrit, by email

    I think GPs do a vitally important job and deserve to be well rewarded
    for their efforts. A significant proportion of their income is now
    related to the quality of care they provide and that can only be a
    good thing. We will continue to tie GP income to patient experience,
    and we are working with GPs to ensure that at least 50 per cent of
    practices extend opening hours.

    You were born in Iraq. What do you make of the current state of
    the country?

    Maajid K, London

    Although I was born in Iraq, my family are Armenian and I was raised
    in Ireland. Progress has been made in bringing security and stability
    to the country - but clearly there is more to be done.

    For someone with connections to Iraq, did you support the
    invasion? Chris Bute, by email

    I was not privy to the information that led the Government to support
    the invasion. Clearly this was a complex situation where decisions
    had to be made. I think the key now is to support the Iraqi people and
    help them to develop their country into an economic and viable state.

    As medicines become more expensive and varied, isn't the NHS
    doomed? Shaun Barlow, SE14

    It's an interesting point. I'm a passionate believer in a universal
    tax-funded healthcare system, free at the point of need. Clearly,
    the NHS needs to consider how it keeps pace with the ever increasing
    number of technologies and medicines. Innovations can sometimes
    offer significant savings. Statins, medicines which reduce the risk
    of heart attacks and strokes, are a good example.

    In 1997, Tony Blair said he'd get rid of the internal market in the
    NHS. He didn't. Should it be removed now? P Foucault, by email

    The internal market was a top-down system driven by price competition,
    where patients followed the contracts negotiated by strategic health
    authorities or GP fundholders. I would argue it has been replaced with
    a fairer system in which there is no negotiation over price, care is
    provided according to national standards and funding increasingly
    follows the choices made by patients, who tell us they want better
    quality and faster access to services.

    Most people have a bad impression of the NHS, but good personal
    experiences of it. How on earth can that be changed? Dr G Waters,
    by email

    It's really good that nine out of 10 patients who use the NHS rate
    their care as excellent, very good or good. Unfortunately, that
    doesn't always translate into a wider sense of enthusiasm about the
    service and there is a greater appetite for bad news about the NHS
    than good. We all need to challenge that - patients, public, staff
    and the Government. Through my work, I encourage staff working in
    the service to be proud of its successes and be ambassadors for the
    good work being done.I also want to get more patients talking about
    their good experiences.

    Are there too manymanagers and not enough nurses in our
    hospitals? Frank Jenkins, Cardiff

    There has been a significant increase in the numbers of staff across
    the NHS, which has helped transform the service. I used to be the
    only colorectal surgeon in my hospital. Now I am one of a team of
    four surgeons working with colleagues including two full-time stoma
    nurses, two specialist nurses and a nurse consultant. Many people don't
    realise how essential managers are in ensuring that patients receive
    the care they need. There are far fewer managers than people think;
    they make up less than 3 per cent of the total workforce.

    New Labour has spentbillions on the NHS and nothing seems to have
    improved.

    Where's it gone? Sophie Williams, by email

    There have been many improvements. Back in 1997, the NHS was in
    relatively poor health. Investment levels had varied considerably over
    previous decades, hampering proper planning. I only have to look in
    my own experience to see the progress that has been made - there are
    more staff in my team, our patients do not wait as long for operations
    and their care is of a higher quality and much more personal.

    Is it right an unelected person has so much power over the future of
    such a huge public institution? Philip Barry, London E3

    I'm part of an elected government and it was a great honour to be asked
    by the to join the team. I am a practising clinician, seeing patients
    two days a week, and thus much of my working life is, and will continue
    to be, centred on patient care. I intend to draw onmy experience in
    clinical practice, research and teaching to ensure I add value.

    If you could make everyone do one thing to improve their health,
    what would it be? Val King, Richmond

    Take regular exercise.

    Do you listen to music during operations? Linda Edwards, Brighton

    Yes, sometimes. My preference is Led Zeppelin and Pink Floyd and
    occasionally Capital Radio.

    Will we ever have a cure for cancer? Dave R, by email

    We are making great strides in treatments, some of which we could
    not have imagined. We may eradicate some specific cancers but it is
    unlikely we will eradicate cancer altogether.

    --Boundary_(ID_DN687phzoNSFBcs618sDHQ )--
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