Health
Latest:
Personal carers 'deserve more', say MPs
Psychosis drugs 'linked to stroke risk'
Low-dose radiation linked to heart disease
Social inequalities cutting life expectancy
C. diff deaths up 28 per cent in one year
Mental skills decline with age
Tories scorn obesity 'excuses'
Nice recommends new blindness drug
Toxic metal warning over herbal medicines
New guidelines for high cholesterol sufferers
Health Archive
All news archive
Tories aim to be party of "better NHS"
24/06/2008
A Conservative government would develop an NHS that focuses on patient experiences rather than targets, David Cameron will say today.
The Conservative party leader is to outline how the Tories would direct the NHS, pledging to make them not just the party of the NHS but "the party of a better NHS".
At a speech to the Royal College of Surgeons, Mr Cameron will say that a Conservative government would aim to improve cancer, stroke, heart disease and lung disease survival rates so that they are better than EU averages.
His party would also aim to improve patient outcomes, satisfaction and experiences and to reduce adverse events.
Mr Cameron will accuse Labour of creating "bureaucratic, top-down process targets" and say how his party's green paper would allow medical professionals to "focus on the result itself, not how it is achieved".
"I want us to be the party of a better NHS [and this] means being clear about how we'll get there," Mr Cameron is to say.
"No more pointless re-organisations - just building and improving. No more top-down process targets - but an information revolution to measure outcomes.
"No more talking about patient power - but actually giving it to them, through greater accountability. That's the way we can create a health service that is truly the envy of the world."
Delicious
Digg
Reddit
Facebook
StumbleUpon
Comments on this story
Add your comments here
No comments submitted yet