Kingston NHS social enterprise experiment ‘could cost £578,000’

15th December 2009

Plans by Kingston Primary Care Trust (PCT) to hive off NHS services into a social enterprise could cost nearly £600,000, Unite, the largest union in the country, has said.

Unite believes that the money - £4 a head for Kingston’s population – to set up the social enterprise could be better spent on services, such as speech and language therapists, health visitors, physiotherapists, and community nurses.

Using a Freedom of Information request, Unite has discovered that:

  • £181,000 has been spent in 2008/2009 on becoming ‘an autonomous provider’ and ‘business ready’ organisation. A further £79,000 has been earmarked for this ‘externalisation of provider services’ for 2009/10.
  • If the social enterprise is not eligible for VAT refunds for the purchase of goods and services, the additional cost will be £300,000. The NHS is currently exempt from VAT.
  • £18,000 has already been spent on ‘marketing and branding’ for the proposed social enterprise, which will be a commercial organisation, able to win – and lose – contracts to provide services to the NHS for a limited period of time.


Unite is fighting the creation of the social enterprise – a body one step removed from the NHS proper - as it contravenes health secretary Andy Burnham’s recent policy announcement that the NHS is ‘the preferred provider’ for services. 

Karen Reay, Unite national officer for health, said: ”Given the relatively small 150,000- strong population of Kingston, the sums that the PCT is spending on promoting the market dogma of the social enterprise is staggering. We estimate that possible expenditure is £578,000 – and still rising.

”Money that could be going on services, such as speech and language therapists, is being spent on management consultants and the bureaucracy to create the structures for the social enterprise.

”We have repeatedly asked the PCT management to hold a ballot of staff on all the options for the future, but they have adamantly refused to go down the democratic route.”

Unite is concerned that if the social enterprise loses its contracts to, for example, a North American private healthcare company in five years time, jobs could be lost and services to the Kingston public could become fragmented. The ethos of a NHS providing a unified, joined-up service for patients could disappear.  

Karen Reay said: ”Social enterprises will mean the fragmentation of services; and the employment conditions and pensions of NHS staff being eroded, or even lost.”

The viability of the financial model proposed could be jeopardised, if VAT is charged on its services not directly related to health care, such as marketing and legal fees, and treatments that may not be regarded as essential.

ENDS

NOTES TO NEWS EDITORS:

Unite has welcomed the government’s statement, made in October, that the NHS is ‘the preferred provider’ of choice when it comes to delivering services, rather than private sector organisations.

In his letter to the chief executives of the strategic health authorities and primary care trusts, NHS chief executive,  David Nicholson, said: “The NHS as the preferred provider is about getting the best care for patients and looking after the NHS staff who care for them. Our aim is to ensure that NHS staff are treated fairly and engaged in decisions.”
 
The Patchwork Privatisation of Our Health Service – a special report can be downloaded from www.unitetheunion.org/health and then clicking on Health B4 Profit campaign.


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