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Steve Darling
Main Page: Steve Darling (Liberal Democrat - Torbay)Department Debates - View all Steve Darling's debates with the Department of Health and Social Care
(1 week, 5 days ago)
Commons Chamber
Steve Darling (Torbay) (LD)
As I am sure is the case in many other constituencies, the NHS is perhaps the most valued service in Torbay, where it is the largest employer. Ironically, while the Government talk about investing in the NHS, Torbay is looking at 300 voluntary redundancies. Rather than the investment that the Government talk about, the reality in Torbay is job cuts, many of which are likely to be to clinicians. That is the background to my comments, which I will limit to the crucial ones.
Torbay has had the luxury of an integrated care organisation, which has been vaunted internationally as the way forward. The direction of travel of the Government is very much toward integrated care organisations, as my hon. Friend the Member for North Shropshire (Helen Morgan) alluded to. We have section 75 arrangements, yet because there has been a failure of focus on this matter by NHS colleagues over a number of years, they have been binned in recent months. We have appealed to the Secretary of State to intervene, but he has failed to do so. In the light of that, how can we have any confidence about greater influence from the Secretary of State? When the appeal happened, he said, “It is a contractual relationship.” The integrated care organisation has resulted in many people being discharged early and people being cared for in the community at a grassroots level. As Liberal Democrats, we know that that is desperately important.
The binning of Healthwatch is disturbing. I pay tribute to Kevin Dixon, who heads up the organisation in Torbay and Devon. Only a few years ago, it identified a failure by domiciliary care workers who were supporting the most vulnerable people in their own homes. That resulted in an investigation, which took away the contract from that provider, and another provider ended up better supporting those people. How can we expect that to happen if we effectively give the duty to providers to mark their own homework?
Let me focus on the better care fund. It is bonkers that this is being handed on a plate to the NHS acute care services. There needs to be partnership working between adult social care providers and the NHS. It should be driving better care—it says that on the label. This is extremely perverse. I hope that as the Bill progresses, common sense will prevail in a number of areas.