All 1 Debates between Mike Freer and Jack Dromey

NHS Risk Register

Debate between Mike Freer and Jack Dromey
Wednesday 22nd February 2012

(12 years, 10 months ago)

Commons Chamber
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Mike Freer Portrait Mike Freer
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My hon. Friend has made a very good point. The issues that have been raised have nothing to do with the risk register. This is simply a new stick with which to beat the Government. No amount of amendment and no amount of rational argument will appease those who are simply philosophically opposed to reform of the NHS.

Jack Dromey Portrait Jack Dromey
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Will the hon. Gentleman give way?

Mike Freer Portrait Mike Freer
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I will give way later. I want to make a little progress first.

I do not believe that the Opposition’s call for publication is remotely to do with transparency. If it were, they would themselves have published risk registers in the past. The right hon. Member for Leigh (Andy Burnham) said earlier that the present was not the same as the past, and that the past had not involved major reorganisations. Let me refresh his memory. In 2008 and 2009, in London, there was a major reorganisation of hyper-acute stroke units and a major reorganisation of major trauma centres. When the clinicians and the public opposed that action, what did NHS London do? It did not make the risk register public; it did not make details of all the risks fully available so that we could make an informed judgment, as the Opposition are trying to persuade us to do. It simply rewrote the consultation results, and what did it say? “The consultation results from the people of Barnet were inconvenient, and we are therefore inserting a new chapter so that we can ignore the clinicians and the patients.” That is the track record of the Labour party.

The Opposition may come to regret—

Mike Freer Portrait Mike Freer
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I said earlier that I would give way to the hon. Member for Birmingham, Erdington (Jack Dromey).

Jack Dromey Portrait Jack Dromey
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I am grateful to the hon. Gentleman. When he stood for election and went to the good people of Finchley and Golders Green—the doctors and the nurses in the constituency that he now represents—did he say to them, “Vote for me, and we will undertake a top-down reorganisation of the national health service”?