Kamis, 26 Januari 2012

Miliband and Cameron clash on NHS

25 January 2012 13: 31 GMT state Doctor Health Bill works its way through Parliament work leader Ed Miliband, invited to delete questions fight David Cameron, his plans to restructure the NHS in England, during their Prime Minister.

Mr Miliband said: "this is a law no one wants." "It is by the doctors, nurses and patients, however,."

"Beiseite-her pride and arrogance and drop of this... unwanted Bill," he said.

Mr Cameron said to support the reforms which would improve NHS and said there were "Thousands of GPs nationwide" and to implement.

Under the plans GP provided for much of the NHS budget during the health service to more competition from the private and voluntary sectors until is opened.

"Out of Touch"

The Prime Minister said there were 4,000 additional NHS doctors, 100,000 additional patients treated and inpatient and outpatient waiting times were low, since the coalition came in May 2010 to power.

He said £ 7 billion £ 20bn savings in health care requires already have been found was, added: "when we heard it we would be spending the NHS scrapping cut reforms of the NHS and the NHS would be better not worse."

He accused work "in panic to get and back down the very first moment, the trade unions of"No"say".

"If you make a choice, if you transparency to introduce, if you that private and volunteers a greater role should play areas, are competition to introduce you to say, of course you a challenge." "But this is what the right thing do, everything is sometimes."

Mr Miliband said Mr Cameron had happened "out of touch" with the NHS was and he should listen to the views of the nurses and doctors, Gewerkschaften have been added to the plans.

The exchanges came as pressure increases to Minister on the NHS, after mounting concerns about the health and social care bill added a critical report by MPs.

The Health Select Committee report says that the revision was the ability of the NHS, which represent savings, which it to give a future to hinder.

'Constructive suggestions'

Health Secretary Andrew Lansley defended the changes on Tuesday, say you were "essential" to improve the NHS.

"The legislation of its passage is not completed, the men make many important and constructive proposals, and we take the on board, but largely supported the principles of the law," he said.

Last week, said Royal College of midwives and the Royal College of nursing, which previously was seen as backing the plans, the health bill joining the British Medical Association in search of the complete contradiction should be scrapped.

On Thursday, which is Royal Academy of medical colleges, a Federation of 20 organizations and to what do trade unions discuss the plans.

The Bill is still working its way through Parliament and on the weekend of Deputy Prime Minister Nick Clegg said that the plans despite fresh criticism from MPs must go ahead.

A number of major structural changes have already taken place in the health sector and leaders have started to head up the new organizations recruited.

Enough GP have also come forward, new management groups set up, to cover 97% of the country.



Source BBC



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