PCTs: From being “champions for patients” to being abolished – in just two months

Yesterday's announcement that all 302 Primary Care Trusts in England will be abolished by 2013 with more power given to GPs represents a complete about-turn from the Coalition Agreement of less than two months ago.

Yesterday’s announcement that all 302 152 Primary Care Trusts in England will be abolished by 2013 with more power given to GPs represents a complete about-turn from the Coalition Agreement of less than two months ago, which promised directly elected patient representatives on PCT boards and pledged that local PCTs “will act as a champion for patients”, commissioning services best undertaken at a wider level “rather than directly by GPs”.

The agreement, pages 24-25, clearly states:

We will ensure that there is a stronger voice for patients locally through directly elected individuals on the boards of their local primary care trust (PCT).

The remainder of the PCT’s board will be appointed by the relevant local authority or authorities, and the Chief Executive and principal officers will be appointed by the Secretary of State on the advice of the new independent NHS board. This will ensure the right balance between locally accountable individuals and technical expertise.

The local PCT will act as a champion for patients and commission those residual services that are best undertaken at a wider level, rather than directly by GPs.

It will also take responsibility for improving public health for people in their area, working closely with the local authority.

At no point does it mention their abolition, but quite the opposite, namely that PCTs would be stregthened and democartised. Now, they are in fact going to be split up between councils and GPs – yet even the supposed accountability to local councils isn’t fully democratic, as they will also be answerable to a national body.

Earlier today, Left Foot Forward looked in detail at the health secretary’s white paper, highlighting one of the most fundamental problems the plans will encounter – that most GPs do not want the hassle of strategic planning, negotiating multi-million pound budgets and making unpopular decisions about NHS service organisation and costs – and asking whether the white paper marks the beginning of the end of the NHS.

27 Responses to “PCTs: From being “champions for patients” to being abolished – in just two months”

  1. Anon E Mouse

    Liz – How about the £10k tax level – that was Lib Dem. There was a time when the Labour Party used to represent the poor you know…

    Have you actually read the coalition agreement?

  2. joe fd

    Just for accuracy’s sake there are 152 PCTs, not 302.

  3. Terry

    Lib Dem Voice

    says Lib Dem input into NHS white paper is Local authority overview of GP commsissioning

    Yet Local authorities already have this power to review NHS plans – O & S committee

    So this was there fig leaf they got for agreeing to privatise the NHS

  4. Liz McShane

    Anon – I was referring the The Lib Dem manifesto which is what people who voted LD voted for. The Coalition Agreement was just between The Tories & Lib Dems and not voted on by the electorate!

  5. Anon E Mouse

    Liz – Everything changed once the size of the Labour debt was uncovered – the last Labour treasury minister admitted it.

    I remember “No tuition fees” and “Lisbon Treaty referendum” and “Full third term” and on and on.

    The coalition agreement may not have been voted for but Labour most certainly were not (according to every minister in the leadership election)and it seems for reasons I have been ranting about for ever… your beloved Gordon Brown… not that ANYONE ever elected him as Prime Minister.

    Or Labour leader…

    It doesn’t matter who you vote for the government always gets in!

Comments are closed.