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The NHS: Still Worth Defending?

 
  September 30, 2015  
     
 


Battle of Ideas, Barbican Centre, Silk Street, London EC2Y 8DS
4pm-5.15pm, Saturday 17 October 2015


A public discussion of the UK's National Health Service taking place at the Barbican Centre, as part of the Battle over Life and Death strand of the Battle of Ideas festival.

We all love the NHS, don't we? Despite the ubiquity of platitudes about defending 'our' NHS, though, exactly what we are defending and why?

The NHS has undergone significant changes in the 67 years since its inception. Shifts within patient demographics, combined with increased patient demands and advances in technology and medical care, have resulted in a system at breaking point. One million patients are seen every 24 hours, at a cost of £2billion each week. The kind of care available and sums of money involved would surely astonish the institution's founders. Indeed, although often perceived as one homogenous care provider, high-profile scandals, such as those at Mid Staffordshire and at the Morecambe Bay Maternity Unit, have illustrated the variability in care across different hospitals - even within the same trust. And on many important measures - for example, cancer survival rates - the NHS seems to perform badly compared to health services in comparable countries.

Nevertheless, the NHS is one of the few manifestations of the British state that elicits strong and often positive feelings from significant numbers of people. Politicians and parties often define themselves in relation to the NHS and compete to be seen to be supporting it - even when this can be difficult to reconcile with their policies and track record. No major party seems willing to have a more fundamental discussion about whether a taxpayer-funded health service, governed by national and local government, is the best way to take care of the nation's health.

Yet, at the same time, the reality is that more and more publicly funded healthcare is provided by profit-making or third-sector organisations. The introduction of the Health and Social Care Act 2012, particularly in relation to the commissioning of services from 'any willing provider', has opened the doors to private and volunteer input, often with variable results. Following the Conservatives' victory in the 2015 general election, many supporters of the NHS fear that these reforms will be pursued further.

Yet is the NHS everyone queues up to defend more national myth than effective health care? Can it survive in its current form, and more importantly, should it?
 
 
Organized by: Battle of Ideas
Invited Speakers: Clare Gerada (Medical Director of the NHS Practitioner Health Programme, and former Chair of the Royal College of General Practitioners)

Frankie Anderson (Registrar in Neuro-Rehabilitation in the Oxford Deanery, and Cofounder of the Sheffield Salon)

Kristian Niemietz (Senior Research Fellow at the Institute of Economic Affairs, and author of the reports What Are We Afraid Of? Universal Healthcare in Market-Orientated Health Systems (.pdf 1.19MB) and A Patient Approach: Putting The Consumer at the Heart of UK Healthcare (.pdf 2.45MB))

Michael Fitzpatrick (author of the books The Tyranny of Health: Doctors and the Regulation of Lifestyle, MMR and Autism: What Parents Need to Know and Defeating Autism: A Damaging Delusion)

Sandy Starr (Communications Officer at the Progress Educational Trust, and Webmaster of BioNews)

[All of the speakers listed above are confirmed]
 
Deadline for Abstracts: N/A
 
Registration: Details of how to book for the Battle of Ideas festival can be found online here.
E-mail: sstarr@progress.org.uk
 
   
 
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