A liberal blueprint for the NHS - Lamb

4 Feb 2010

Liberal Democrat Shadow Health Secretary, Norman Lamb has today [Thursday] published his vision for how the NHS can cope in the current economic climate.

The proposals, published in The NHS: a liberal blueprint, are not formal party policy but set out Norman Lamb's vision of a genuinely decentralised NHS. The proposals are designed to protect frontline services by more effective use of resources. They include dramatically cutting NHS bureaucracy, changing the financial incentives in the NHS to promote prevention of ill health, linking GP pay to improving patients health such as giving up smoking or losing weight, giving every patient the right to contact their GP by email and fines for people who turn up drunk in A&E and are aggressive to staff.

Commenting, Liberal Democrat Shadow Health Secretary, Norman Lamb said:

"The NHS is a much loved institution but it is facing an unprecedented financial challenge over the next few years.

"Labour and the Conservatives are in complete denial about the scale of the problem we face. Rather than reforming the NHS to make it more efficient they will cut services and frontline staff.

"These proposals set out a liberal approach to the NHS which can drastically reduce costs, improve the quality of care and give people a say in how their local services are run.

"The NHS is far too important to the people of this country to ignore this challenge anymore - we must act now to secure its future."

This website uses cookies

Like most websites, this site uses cookies. Some are required to make it work, while others are used for statistical or marketing purposes. If you choose not to allow cookies some features may not be available, such as content from other websites. Please read our Cookie Policy for more information.

Essential cookies enable basic functions and are necessary for the website to function properly.
Statistics cookies collect information anonymously. This information helps us to understand how our visitors use our website.
Marketing cookies are used by third parties or publishers to display personalized advertisements. They do this by tracking visitors across websites.