Defend the NHS


No cuts

No closures

PROTESTERS ARE taking to the streets of Huddersfield again on 14
January, to oppose plans to centralise hospital services to a
neighbouring town and the closure of a smaller local hospital.

The transfer will mean Huddersfield, the biggest town in the UK, will
lose gynaecology wards, children’s wards, the special care baby unit,
consultant-led maternity services and inpatient elective surgery.

The Calderdale and Huddersfield Trust bosses claim the move is
necessary for clinical not financial reasons. However, the trust’s chief
executive states they can’t afford to employ more consultants to solve
the problem – despite receiving an income of just over £700,000 last
year herself, enough to pay for at least two more consultants.

Staff have recently been asked for their views on how the hospitals
could save money. Surely cutting the salaries of the unaccountable trust
board would be a good start?

On 10 January over 30,000 signatures on petitions and 3,000 letters
of protest, were handed to the trust. This gives some indication of the
strength of opposition to the plans. Although the so-called consultation
process is coming to an end, the final decision on the fate of these
services won’t be made until mid March.

Dr Jackie Grunsell, a local GP who has been leading the
campaign against the cuts said:

"There is still time for us to make the trust sit up and listen so
the campaign does not end here. We have decided if the council refuse to
hold a referendum on the issue we will stand candidates against them in
the local elections in May. We will make that the referendum on the
proposals!"

The campaign has united staff and patients in fighting NHS
privatisation and cuts.

"We realise we are not alone in Huddersfield.
Similar attacks on the NHS are happening all over the country thanks to
New Labour’s health ‘reforms’. Tony Blair clearly wants to privatise the
NHS from top to bottom and we now need to link up with other campaigns
nationally to fight to defend our NHS."


Saturday’s demonstration will start at St. George’s Square, outside
Huddersfield railway station at 11am and will march through the town
centre.


  • End privatisation. Bring all health care into one nationally planned
    and properly financed, publicly owned service which is free at the point
    of use.
  • Nationalise the pharmaceutical industry, the pharmacy chains and
    medical supply industry and integrate them into a democratically
    controlled NHS.
  • Fight all cuts and closures. No redundancies.
  • Unite the many defend the NHS campaigns. For a national demonstration
    to build support for industrial action.

NHS hit by internal market

FOR SOME time now, the Audit Commission has been pointing out what it
sees as individual hospitals’ financial weakness. Now, with the present
crisis of NHS funding, it has produced a report detailing the failings
of an entire NHS strategic network in Surrey and Sussex.

Surrey and Sussex, Royal West Sussex and Brighton and Sussex
University hospital trusts have deficits of some £56 million and others
in the strategic health authority had deficits totalling £11.3 million.
The Audit Commission warns of potential mergers if not closures of
entire clinics or hospitals.

But who’s caused these problems? The internal market has been brought
back in to hospitals around the country. Hospitals now get paid
according to how much work and how many patients they cope with, based
on a crude average hospital cost.

However, if a hospital departs from this crude mean due to
demographic or other differences – it can easily build up a ‘deficit’.
This and the welcoming embrace of New Labour for privatisations of
services by profiteering businesses is putting immense pressure on NHS
budgets.

Both hospital trusts and primary care trusts are now facing problems.
Campaigns against closures and cutbacks are springing up around the
country; these must be co-ordinated to build support for a national
demonstration and national strike action to defend the NHS.