There was a massive shortage of PPE because the supply chain had been privatised –
No to Privatisation, Underfunding and Fragmentation of the NHS
The reason
why there was a massive failure to supply PPE was because of the fragmentation
caused by privatisation. When the emergency came the privateers were unable to
cope. Eleven of them, such as DHL, the parcel delivery service, which is not
known for its expertise on public health, would then select other suppliers who
would in turn commission others.
Report co-author Professor David Hall of the University of Greenwich
said:
“Privatisation of the NHS supply
chain has created a complex, fragmented, unresponsive and bureaucratic mess
which has left us unprepared and ill equipped to tackle the current crisis.
“So much responsibility has been
outsourced to so many contractors that the Secretary of State literally cannot
know what he is doing.
“It is shocking that DHL, the
parcel-delivery subsidiary of Deutsche Post, has been deciding how to spend
over £4 billion of the NHS budget.”
These
firms, whose sole motivation is profit, have an entirely different way of going
about ensuring PPE supplies. Instead of
stockpiling for an emergency, they operated according to ‘just in time’ contracts. Keeping large stocks is unprofitable.
Below I
reprint an article
from the Morning Star on the Report by We Own It into the PPE failure. This was
not inevitable, it was the consequence of introducing the internal market and
the profit motive into the NHS.
When you
are a private supplier your concern is the bottom line not the needs of the NHS.
It is no surprise that Keir Starmer, busy launching a new witchhunt in the Labour
Party against ‘anti-Semitism’, has said nothing about this. As a Blairite tool he
too is committed to the continuation of stealth privatisation in the NHS.
The government
has also announced a 2 year public sector pay freeze. So all those nurses and
doctors who people have been applauding every Thursday night for risking their
lives will be repaid with a pay freeze as the placard of a health worker
attending our demonstration said.
Workers and
members of Brighton and Hove Trades Council staged a demonstration outside Hove
Town Hall on 1st June to protest at the attempt of the government to
force schools to take children regardless of the effect on the spread of
coronavirus.
The numbers
of deaths are still in the hundreds per day and there is a danger of a second
wave of infections or simply the first wave flaring up again. But to the government
the needs of capitalism come first.
Tony
Greenstein
Private
profit hitting public health
Mass outsourcing in the ‘fundamentally
dysfunctional’ NHS supply chain blamed for disastrous ongoing shortage of PPE
PRIVATISATION is at the centre of the “fundamentally dysfunctional”
sourcing of vital personal protective equipment (PPE) to NHS trusts, a report
by We Own It found yesterday.
The privatisation of the NHS supply chain and its break-up into 11
outsourced contracts has contributed to the “ongoing fiasco” of the failure of
the health service to acquire and distribute sufficient PPE to medical staff,
according to the report by the public-ownership campaign group.
Instead of being handled by civil servants directly employed by the NHS,
privateers such as DHL are in charge of selecting suppliers for the health
service, the report revealed.
These suppliers in turn select other private companies to make specific
items, such as PPE gowns, for them and then hand them to yet another private
logistics company to deliver them to the trusts.
NHS trusts have been told not to source PPE from local suppliers but to
use this centralised system. In doing so, every piece of equipment goes through
four separate layers of profit-taking.
Report co-author Professor David Hall of the University of Greenwich
said: “Privatisation of the NHS supply chain has created a complex, fragmented,
unresponsive and bureaucratic mess which has left us unprepared and ill
equipped to tackle the current crisis.
“So much responsibility has been outsourced to so many contractors that
the Secretary of State literally cannot know what he is doing.
“It is shocking that DHL, the parcel-delivery subsidiary of Deutsche
Post, has been deciding how to spend over £4 billion of the NHS budget.”
Mr Hall said the entire system must be simplified and brought under
direct NHS control, with clear lines of accountability. It is work that should
be done by civil servants employed by the NHS.
Such workers are responsive to the needs of their fellow workers in the
NHS, with a public-service culture of prioritising safety, long-term planning
and smart use of skills and resources within the NHS, local communities and the
local manufacturing sector, Mr Hall added.
A central problem the report identifies is the “just in time” business
model used by logistics contractors such as Unipart in the stocking and
distribution of PPE.
This model creates the risk that sufficient supplies are not available
to manage unforeseen events such as the coronavirus pandemic, the report said.
We Own It director Cat Hobbs said: “It is beyond scandalous that so much of the coronavirus response has been handed over to private companies — companies that have failed time and time again to deliver.
“Whether it is Unipart or Deloitte, Movianto or Clipper Logistics, these
companies should be kept well away from our NHS.”
Ms Hobbs said the crisis has revealed that the NHS is made far more
vulnerable by privatisation, and the failings — from the distribution of
sufficient PPE to the ineffective approach to testing — lie at the door of
private companies.
“From now on, we need to ensure that our NHS is run in the interest of
public health, not private profit,” she said. “In doing so, the government
needs to reinstate it as a fully publicly owned and run health service.”
We Own It has launched a campaign demanding that the NHS be put in
charge of managing its supply chain, that no new private contracts be granted
during the coronavirus crisis, and that the NHS be reinstated as a fully public
service.
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