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Wednesday 23 May 2012
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GPC points finger at PCTs for 'bullying' CCGs

By Andrew McNicoll | 16 Dec 2011

NHS managers are ‘bullying' clinical commissioning groups by imposing authorisation deadlines against GPs' will, muscling in on CCG recruitment processes and dictating Any Qualified Provider (AQP) terms, the GPC has warned. 

A number of GPC representatives reported concerns to yesterday's GPC council meeting that PCTs and central Government are pressurising CCGs.

GPC negotiators said commissioners are being leant on to set dates for authorisation, while regional GPC representatives attacked PCTs and SHAs for muscling in on CCG recruitment processes and riding roughshod over GP objections to the way AQP is being implemented.

GP leaders said the attempts to dictate authorisation dates to CCGs flew in the face of Department of Health commitments. Following the Government's health bill ‘listening exercise', ministers pledged that CCGs would only take on full commissioning responsibilities when they were ‘ready and willing', rather than the original 2013 deadline.

‘CCGs are being bullied into developing in ways their members are not happy with,' said Dr Laurence Buckman, GPC chair and a GP in Barnet. ‘[CCGs] can do whatever they want to a timetable of their choosing. The government has made it clear that there will not be a 2013 deadline in quite the way that was envisaged.'

Dr Buckman's warning came as GPC members in the North West and Essex raised concerns at the pressure being put on CCGs.

Dr John Hughes, GPC representative for Salford and Trafford, Manchester and Stockport, said GP commissioners had been told that PCT executives should sit on selection panels for recruiting lay board members to the CCG.

‘The cluster sent an email that said it was acceptable for CCGs to appoint former PCT non-execs to the board but where CCGs are holding open applications [for lay members] then the chair of the PCT had to be involved and sit on the panel. They don't have any remit to do that at all.'

An NHS Greater Manchester spokesperson confirmed that the chair of the PCT cluster will be involved in the appointment of lay members.  ‘The chair will provide a view but the ultimate decision still lies with individual CCGs. We believe the majority of our CCGs will welcome this support,' the spokesperson added.

Dr Brian Balmer, a  GPC member and chair of Essex LMCs, said PCTs were refusing to ‘let go' of commissioning, and were sending a ‘very strong signal' that they wanted to approve the appointments of CCG boards.

‘In parts of Essex we're getting a very, very strong signal that the PCT want to approve the chair of the CCG. I think that is the way the old world works – that is the PBC model, it is not clinical commissioning. At some point the PCTs have got to let go.'

‘The CCG idea is that once the board is elected, the board should then choose their chairman – that is the way most organisations function. People who are credible and well qualified on the [CCG] board should choose who their chair is. But the PCT wants a PCT process.'

Dr David Wrigley, GPC representative for Cumbria and Lancashire, said PCTs in his area had imposed AQP terms on GPs despite CCG opposition. Dr Wrigley said one CCG had declined to select three areas to put out to AQP on the basis they were satisfied with current provision, but claims the local PCT then imposed three areas on the CCG.

Dr Wrigley said: ‘I presume the PCT received direction from up high. It's trickling down from the DH, to the cluster to the CCGs. It smacks of more of the same of the top down, Whitehall management. We said no but it was still imposed on us. This is a taste of what's to come really.'

READERS' COMMENTS

Vinci Ho, GP Partner,
16 Dec 2011
The politics will lie on how , when and who to define the criteria of this AQP, you can only have so many 'qualified' anyway. If the existing provider can be proved to be 'better' than others , what is the fuss of changing? Of course , CCGs have a lot grounds to defend if they want to remain status quo . PCTs are doing the dirty job following orders of central government . Nobody is surprised .
I only hope colleagues in CCGs will at least have some spines to stand up against the tide . What is right? What is wrong? Only history will judge you later on ........
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Julian Hall, GP Partner,
16 Dec 2011
How many abbreviations can you fit in a Pulse headline? Maybe the journalists could have a competition. TTFN.
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Anonymous, Other healthcare professional,
16 Dec 2011
".....but where CCGs are holding open applications [for lay members] then the chair of the PCT had to be involved and sit on the panel. They don't have any remit to do that at all.'"

Actually, they do. As at today, CCGs are sub committees of the Boards of statutory NHS organisations. Chairs have every right in being involved in who is appointed to these posts on their sub-committees. This will change after 2013, but until then, get over it.
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Anonymous, PCT,
19 Dec 2011
Interesting from a PCT perspective, as we're being given instructions for CCGs to take on full delegation by April 2012, albeit in 'shadow form' (whatever that means in this context).

Is it surprising that mixed messages are being given out? GPs are taking responsibility, but the DH is saying 'no pressure, you know, whenever', but telling PCTs to make it happen, no excuses.
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Anonymous, PCT,
19 Dec 2011
The 'ready and willing' statement was only ever seen as a political statement to placate. Nothing really was changed and certainly in my PCT we have assumed that actually meant 'make sure they are ready' by 2013. The govt need the CCG's in charge and able to claim they are working for the next general election so they can claim a success and if they loose make it harder for the incoming govt to change them again.
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