The Scotsman

An outsourcin­g by any other name would smell as politicall­y stinky

- By GINA DAVIDSON

Question: When is the outsourcin­g of government work to private firms not outsourcin­g? Answer: When the government agreeing the contracts knows how impossible it is to disperse the political stink associated with any part of Scotland’s NHS being “privatised”.

If anyone is aware the idea of privatisin­g health services is anathema to many Scots, it’s Ni cola Sturgeon. So it's little wonder that it was kept rather quiet that the Scottish Government had signed a £1.3 million contract with a call centre in Motherwell last month to carry out contact tracing services for the NHS, with a little work thrown the way of Barrhead Travel too.

And when the contract was revealed, the First Minister was at great pains to point out how different this kind of private sector work with the NHS was to the other kinds of contracts awarded to the private sector to carry out NHS work in other parts of the UK.

Certainly she wanted to be “really, really clear about this and leave no room for misapprehe­nsion” that the contract was not outsourcin­g, some - thing “we have not and will not do”. Some may say she protested too much, but she was not going to allow people to yield to the “temptation … to paint this as something it’s not”.

Instead she painted a picture of a benevolent government “recruiting” staff from the private sector into the NHS to both help struggling firms and bolster the contact tracing service.

Furthermor­e, these new contact tracers were now fully part of the NHS and no longer in the private sector at all – “they work in the NHS system and under the direction of the NHS, they are not working to a private company – that’s not semantics, that’s a very different thing”.

But no matter how pretty the picture, there’s really no getting away from the fact that a deal has been signed with at least one private firm to supply a contact tracing service.

Even more puzzling was her statement that “less than 100” staff from Ascensos were involved in the £1.3m contract.

Quite where the vast majority of that money is going wasn’t specified. And as far as Barrhead Travel’s involvemen­t goes, all that is needed to be known is “they’re working in an Nhs-led delivered system”.

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