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MAGAZINE EDITION

Chris Johnstone Intro
Hamish MacLaren's Cross Words
What is Scotland For?
I Am Woman, Hear Me Snore
On Being Opinionated
NHS24 Under-5's Survey
The Dangers of Auto-inflation
Lost in Time
Lesley Morrison in Faslane
Kathleen Long Goes Under
Review: Bad Medicine

CONTRIBUTORS

Chris Johnstone
Hamish McLaren
Gerry McCartney
Ali Bodie
Peter Davies
3 Authors
Blair Smith
Peter Murchie
Lesley Morrison
Kathleen Long
Chris Johnstone Review

About The Contributors

RCGP Bookstore
hoolet 51-Spring 2007
hoolet 50-Winter 2006
hoolet 49-Summer 2006
hoolet 48-Spring 2006
hoolet 47-Winter 2005
hoolet 46-Autumn 2005
hool8 45-Summer 2005
hoolet 44-Spring 2005
hoolet 43-Winter 2004
hoolet 42-Autumn 2004
hoolet 41-Summer 2004
hoolet 40-Spring 2004
hoolet 39-Winter 2003
hoolet 38-Autumn 2003
hoolet 37-Summer 2003
hoolet 36-Spring 2003
hoolet 35-Winter 2002
hoolet 34-Autumn 2002
hoolet 33-Spring 2002
hoolet 32-Winter 2001
hoolet 31-Autumn 2001
hoolet 30-Summer 2001
hoolet 29-Spring 2001
hoolet 28-Winter 2000
hoolet 27-Autumn 2000
hoolet 26-Summer 2000
hoolet 25-Spring 2000
hoolet 24-Winter 1999
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COURSES
Link to owls of the quarter Link to Web Extra page

ENOUGH AND NO MORE

By Chris Johnstone
Contact the editor by e-mail at christopher.johnstone@ntlworld.com

I had the privilege of attending a meeting in Glasgow recently to celebrate Julian Tudor Hart’s impending 80th birthday and the publication of his latest book. Over a hundred people gave up most of a Saturday to hear him and a variety of luminaries speak on the state of general practice and the NHS at the moment. It was intellectually rigorous and very stimulating, but also quite depressing. Depressing because I was in a room with what felt like like-minded people and most of what we stood for and believed in was being taken away in the ever-accelerating decline of health services under New Labour.

Julian Tudor Hart was a shining light to show that it does not have to be this way. Despite hearing of how PFI/PPP is putting us and our children in hock to the tune of billions, despite being shown that inequalities were worsening, despite being shown that GPs are not only cost-effective, but also need more time and resources, despite all this he gave hope that with determination and strength we change what the current direction of the NHSiS and possibly the whole of Scotland.

I was further privileged to take part in a campaign to stop a private company being the first in Scotland to run a GP practice. I attended three public meetings at Harthill and was astonished at the level of public involvement and knowledge of the local populace about the issues. They know that private firms mean lower wages, poorer services and worse working conditions. They know that the care they would receive would most likely get worse. At each meeting the public feeling was overwhelmingly against privatisation, but many people left and said to me that it did not matter how much they said, the Health Board was not listening. They felt defeated before they had lost. They feel that the government is not listening to the people, it has its own agenda and will bulldoze through its wishes without any real debate. But the Health Board did listen and the public got what they wanted. The people of Harthill showed that standing up and being counted can make a difference. So far no practice in Scotland has been privatised, yet.

During the run up to the vote about Harthill, I had the dubious pleasure of appearing on TV. The debate about Harthill was added to a programme about PFI in Lanarkshire and I got to say my piece to a wider audience. Many of my patients were then pleased to let me know they had seen me on the telly and how much fatter i looked than in real life.. More encouraging was the fact that everyone who spoke to me said that they agreed with what I had said. I had many conversations about privatising the health service and especially practices. My poor receptionists were driven demented as I ran even later than usual. People are well informed, unhappy about what was happening and feel powerless to do anything about it. I also work in a mental hospital for one session a week and again I was recognised by many of the staff as the GP on the telly. Again there was overwhelming support for what I had said and that what Labour was doing to the NHS is a disgrace. Many other GPs emailed me and asked how they could get involved.

One thing we can all do if we disagree with the present trend to move more of the NHS into private hands is to join Keep Our NHS Public. This growing group of activists is not attached to any political party and campaigns against privatisation and monitors what is happening around the country. Julian Tudor Hart writes about KONP in his new book as the type of movement which may actually hand power back to the people and make government look at how it is behaving and maybe change it, if not by changing its mind, maybe by changing who runs our country.

Our Parliament is much more democratic than down south and if a consultation paper gets turned into a bill and is supported by 17 MSPs it has to be debated. In Scotland a consultation paper is being prepared prior to the election. This paper is called ’Patients not Profits’ and I will put a link to it on the hoolet web site when it is published. The consultation paper proposes that the law which allows GP surgeries in Scotland to be run by private firms be changed, so that only Health Boards or GP partnerships can provide GMS or PMS services. This was the case up until our new GP contract when the BMA negotiated away our NHS right to run GP surgeries in exchange for out of hours and weekends. This change in who is allowed to run GP surgeries was never discussed publicly and is not wanted by the majority of the public, our patients. So if you want to get involved, speak with your MSPs and those standing to be your MSPs in our new parliament. Ask them what they think about the changes in the NHS and whether they would support a bill to stop private firms running GP practices. Let your patients know about the consultation paper and get them to let their MSPs know about it. If this is what we want we can make it happen. We just have to want it enough.

Patients Not Profits:
http://www.scottish.parliament.uk/business/bills/pdfs/mb-consultations/PatientsNotProfitConsultation.pdf

Other hoolet online articles by Chris Johnstone can be found at:
hoolet edition 51 - Enough And No More
hoolet edition 50 - Now We Are 50
hoolet edition 49 - The Policy Palsy
hoolet edition 48 - The Last Waltz
hoolet edition 47 - The Old New Contract
hoolet edition 46 - Teaching to the Converted
hoolet edition 45 - Turkeys Voting For Christmas
hoolet edition 44 - That's a nasty QOF
hoolet edition 43 - Calm Down, Calm Down, It's only the NHS
hoolet edition 42 - Perpetually Fooled Initiative
hoolet edition 41 - Crisis? What Crisis?
hoolet edition 40 - Doing What You Are Told
hoolet edition 39 - A History of hoolets
hoolet edition 38 - Where did it all go wrong?
hoolet edition 37 - Commodificationalising the NHS
hoolet edition 36 - The Cost of Everything and the Value of Nothing
hoolet edition 35 - Much Too Much, Much Too Soon
hoolet edition 34 - What Shall It Profit a Government?
hoolet edition 33 - A Long Career in Applied Cynicism
hoolet edition 32 - My Greatest Pleasure
hoolet edition 31 - Goodbye to the NHS
hoolet edition 30 - The National Health Service is Sorry
hoolet edition 29 - MMR More Media Rubbish
hoolet edition 28 - A Life of Pleasure
hoolet edition 27 - Barricade medicine

Other hoolet reviews by Chris Johnstone:
Bad Medicine
Armed Madhouse
The Bullet Trick
The Medical Detective
Plundering the Public Sector

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hoolet is the magazine of RCGP Scotland. It is supported intellectually, financially and emotionally by RCGP Scotland.

This issue maintained by Robert Hallam.

Hoolet 51 front cover - Spring 2007 Hoolet 50 front cover - Winter 2006 Hoolet 49 front cover - Summer 2006 Hoolet 48 front cover - Spring 2006 Hoolet 47 front cover - Winter 2005 Hoolet 46 front cover - Autumn 2005 Hoolet 45 front cover - Summer 2005 Hoolet 44 front cover - Spring 2005 Hoolet 43 front cover - Winter 2004 Hoolet 42 front cover - Autumn 2004 Hoolet 41 front cover - Summer 2004 Hoolet 40 front cover - Spring 2004 Hoolet 39 front cover - Winter 2003 Hoolet 38 front cover - Autumn 2003 Hoolet 37 front cover - Summer 2003 Hoolet 36 front cover - Spring 2003 Hoolet 35 front cover - Winter 2002 Hoolet 34 front cover - Summer 2002 Hoolet 33 front cover - Spring 2002 Hoolet 32 front cover - Winter 2001 Hoolet 31 front cover - Autumn 2001 Hoolet 30 front cover - Summer 2001 Hoolet 29 front cover - Spring 2001 Hoolet 28 front cover - Winter 2000 Hoolet 27 front cover - Autumn 2000 Hoolet 26 front cover - Summer 2000 Hoolet 25 front cover - Spring 2000 Hoolet 24 front cover - Winter 1999