
Liberal MP Lynne Featherstone has sent out what seems like a reasonably well-considered email on out-of-hours GP services.
What if things go bump in the night?
Sorry about the short notice but I’ve just discovered that our local Health Service are consulting about out-of-hours GP services and we only have until Friday to respond. This is much more interesting than it sounds.
Our out-of-hours services are the people who provide help when we are at our sickest. They are the doctors who come and look after us when we call them out in the dead of night or who we can go to - currently Camidoc. Without them every time we got ill in the middle of the night we’d have to drag our sickly selves to A&E - which is not what A&E was intended for, waiting for hours before receiving treatment and wasting thousands of pounds in taxpayers money - or worse still go without treatment and get really really sick.
So why are they consulting? Well that’s a very good question. Currently our out-of-hours service is provided by Camidoc, and most people agree they do a good job. I’ve met with them myself and that was certainly my impression. They are local and they know the area well. However Camden, Islington, Haringey, and Hackney & City Primary Care Trusts (the people that run our NHS) have clubbed together to see if they can get a better deal by tendering the service again - and seeing if anyone else wants to bid for it.
Whilst it is right to try and get the best service for local people, the problem is that now literally anybody can apply to run the service. In Camden, United Health - the largest American for-profit Healthcare provider have just caused uproar by winning the contract to run 3 GPs surgeries and they may well bid to run our out-of-hours service.
Now I’ve always thought the NHS was my party’s greatest achievement (it was the brainchild of a Liberal Lord - Beaverbrook) and I’ve always thought it works best when it’s run for the greater good - not for profit. But there are practical arguments against a private takeover as well. Camidoc is run by doctors who know the area well. Under Camidoc you may well know the doctor treating you - and even if you don’t you can certainly be sure that they know your area and how to find your house. When you’re at your illest and most vulnerable you’re probably not going to be best able to give directions over the phone to a faceless, nameless doctor who has never been to Haringey before.
So please respond to the consultation straight away - and certainly before Friday night. It is right to have an open tender - and you may not have the same view of Camidoc that I do - but if you are very worried about private American-style for-profit organisations taking over this important service then please take this opportunity to say so.
The easiest way to respond is to email PALS@camdenpct.nhs.uk and you can find out more about the consultation and read the documentation at http://doctorsinthenight.notlong.com. Kind regards, Lynne.
But can someone please tell me who is this Liberal Lord Beaverbrook?
editor[at]recessmonkey.com




See the correction she sent out 30 seconds later:
As some of you were quick to point out, the Liberal Lord who invented the NHS was Lord Beveridge, (not Beaverbrook who was a Tory newspaper owner).
Anon said this on April 18th, 2008 at 4:23 pm
Typical Lib Dem…Lynne Featherbrain strikes again.
Featherbrain said this on April 18th, 2008 at 5:21 pm
[…] in the London elections, life is proving just how funny it can be. Witness, for example, the Liberal MP for Hornsey and Woodgreen who has been claiming the NHS was […]
Sectariana and other London material said this on April 20th, 2008 at 9:59 am
Well, Beveridge was asked to create a report on post war reconstruction, the idea of the NHS was in this report. However Beveridge was also member of the eugenics society. Shocking that she cant even remember the name of one of the most important liberal peers!
NOname said this on April 20th, 2008 at 3:55 pm
I phoned my doctor, the answer machine said phone NHS direct, who told me to phone my out of service doctor, which I did he was in Manchester I was in Swansea, he gave me a number which was in Germany, I phoned back the NHS direct and she was laughing, I went on to the Ambulance service who said you must get a number off the NHS direct we will not attend house calls.
I phoned the NHS direct and said look I’ve got some training in medical problems and I think my wife has Meningitis, she said yes of course and told me to phone up my out of hours doctor, he was again in Germany this time and they asked what was wrong I told them and they said it cannot be that she has measles.
I phoned the police who arrived and said what the matter took them to my wife and said she is dying and I cannot get an ambulance, they called for one. At the hospital it was diagnosed as meningitis and the doctor said another hour she would have died, she spent two weeks in intensive care and two years getting over it she was deaf in one ear.
It took three months before we had an apology and the whole procedure was changed to make a 999 call answered. and they had to come.
It is the most ridiculous case I had heard until one day other people told us about what happened to them.
Robert said this on April 22nd, 2008 at 11:33 am