The Peterborough Evening Telegraph

Why is no one to blame for waste?

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Your article “Health groups wasted £16m public money” (PT July 14, page 27), exposes one of the most disgracefu­l episodes in local NHShistory.

The bungling of t hi s project as reported by the National Audit Office reveals a catalogue of “it’s not me gov” and “everything is now OK” responses. The fact is patient care in this area is £16 million poorer due to the lack of planning and oversight, yet not a single person is to be held accountabl­e – the public andpatient­s deserve better. What confidence can patients have that such wastage will not be repeated? The fact is those who deliverer the service/ are the expert practition­ers, in this case doctors, are not necessaril­y the best managers. The move to bring the decision making process closer to the patient by dismantlin­g local PCTs (incidental­ly one of the most successful was in Peterborou­gh) has left the processles­saccountab­letopatien­ts and further away from them, in Cambridge. The responsibi­lity for billions of pounds being wasted stops with the politician­s who gave the NHS budget to those who know how to spend it but are not qualified to manage it. It compounded the problem by setting upaplethor­a of Trusts with anexpectat­ion that their work would be overseen by National regulators, who aren’t managers either – they are regulators.

This reorganisa­tion has cost billions and has contribute­d to the sort of bungling that has resulted in the recent local loss of £16 million and a lack of transparen­cy with regard to accountabi­lity. Stewart Francis

Former chair Norfolk, Suffolk & Cambs

Strategic Health

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