GPs must be free to innovate to meet local needs

By Tom Moberly, 18 August 2010

GPs must remain free to innovate or the NHS will be unable to meet local needs, a centre-right think tank has argued.

Andrew Lansley: remembered as 'either the great reformer or the great failure’

Andrew Lansley: remembered as 'either the great reformer or the great failure’

A report by the Bow Group this week argues that the new framework on which GP commissioners will be assessed must not be too 'prescriptive'.

Overall the Bow Group is cautiously enthusiastic about the health White Paper, describing it as the most radical since the creation of the NHS.

Depending on the success of the White Paper’s reforms, Health Secretary Andrew Lansley will ‘either be remembered as the great reformer or the great failure’, it said.

But it warns that central planning of targets has been one of the main flaws of QOF and that the new NHS Outcomes Framework could face the same problems. The paper says the focus of the framework on outcomes is encouraging.

But it added: ‘It will be crucial that this framework is not too prescriptive and still allows local consortia to innovate.’

In a report earlier this year, the Bow Group said the QOF's performance in reducing health inequalities is ‘at best mixed and at worst disappointing’.

The latest report argues that central planning is 'an ineffective and flawed way of fostering a system that allows for the prioritisation of local health-care imperatives'.

Setting QOF targets centrally meant they could not reflect local needs, it said. The report said it would be ‘deeply regrettable’ if this was echoed in the new outcomes framework.

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