The Daily Telegraph

Hunt hits back at Hawking as he warns ‘we can’t bury our heads in the sand’ over NHS

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JEREMY HUNT, the Health Secretary, has deepened his row with Stephen Hawking by warning the scientist that “none of us can bury our heads in the sand” over the standard of care in the NHS at weekends.

Prof Hawking used a high-profile lecture last week to warn that the Government was taking the NHS towards a Us-style insurance system and criticised Mr Hunt’s claims over the need for a seven-day health service. Mr Hunt, writing in The Guardian, insisted that no one should “bury our heads in the sand” over standards of weekend care, claiming that most doctors “in their hearts” would prefer their loved ones to be admitted midweek.

Ignoring clinicians’ concerns about the weekend care gap would be “a betrayal of duty by a health secretary”, he said.

He said: “I am afraid Professor Stephen Hawking … is once again wrong in his characteri­sation of Government policy towards the NHS,” said Mr Hunt.

“He does not deny that it has record funding or record numbers of doctors and nurses, but describes these as a ‘distractio­n’.

“Such figures surely are crucial evidence if he is arguing, as he did last weekend in a speech at the Royal Society of Medicine, that the direction of the NHS is heading towards a Us-style insurance system. Such systems – which he seems to now concede are not Government policy – rely on individual­s, and not the state, paying for their healthcare.

“If that was the direction of travel, the state would be spending less, not more, on the NHS.

“Likewise, more individual­s would be taking out private medical insurance – again, the opposite is the case. Although there was indeed a small rise last year, overall there has been a dramatic drop in private medical insurance since 2009.”

Mr Hunt rejected as “incorrect” Prof Hawking’s claim that new “accountabl­e care organisati­on models” in some parts of the NHS represente­d a step towards an insurance-based system.

“This has absolutely nothing to do with the funding model of the NHS, which will remain a single-payer taxpayer-funded system free at the point of use – and should do forever as far as I’m concerned,” he said.

He added: “I admire and respect Stephen Hawking, and have offered to meet him to discuss these issues further, because I believe – whatever our disagreeme­nts – that we both believe in the NHS, and share a passion that it should be the safest and best healthcare system in the world.”

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