Discussion about this post

User's avatar
Mark Outhwaite's avatar

An excellent and clear summary of the issues. I look forward to reading the main report. I have worked in and alongside the NHS for over 30 years - as a Chief Executive (FHSA, DHA, HA, SHA) and a Director of the NHS Modernisation Agency, leaving to become an independent consultant after one too many heaves of the Magic Roundabout of reorganisation. I would add some additional reflections.

Almost all reorganisations in the past 30 years have been shifting the commissioning/regional national Arms Length Body landscape - performative policy making allowing it to seem that something is being done when in reality it has made little difference to the fundamentals. Not least because another reorganisation that fits within the parliamentary lifecycle comes along soon after the last and disrupts what little progress was being made after the previous reorganisation. Change takes 5+ years to bed-in, new relationships to be developed and appropriate capability and capacity to deliver the new roles to be developed. The management savings rarely appear given the costs of redundancy and the other associated costs not being recouped before the next change.

A significantly under-rated cost of these reorganisations and of high staff turn-over at all levels is the loss of 'organisational and system memory' - the network of relationships and 'deep knowledge' that allows patient pathways to function effectively. The Lansley reforms - 'Shifting the Balance of Power' - made the mistake of breaking up established Health Authority teams and insisting that the new Chief Executives not be drawn from from the same geographical area that they were in as current CEs. We were all shifted to different patches and had to completely rebuild our knowledge and networks. As a result many major long-term programmes were badly disrupted if not abandoned altogether as new teams came in without the understanding of the history and the effort already invested.

Alongside this we have seen the decline in investment in Public Health. It's shift from HAs to Local Authorities, whilst it made theoretical sense in terms of bringing a more informed focus to the fundamentals of community health and well-being also exposed them to the prolonged squeeze on local government funding which in many cases has significantly curtailed their role and contribution.

Another observation is linked to your comment on under-management. I would add an additional dimension. I was in the Army before mysteriously finding myself an FHSA Chief Executive in 1989. I have never ceased to be amazed and frustrated by the failure of the NHS to systematically equip its operational managers with the basic survival tools/skills required to do their jobs effectively. For example Operations Management as a discipline is not taught or required as a pre-condition for operational posts. Capacity and Demand, Theory of Constraints, measurement tools such as Statistical Process Control, process mapping and a host of other useful skills are not systematically deployed - and this lack of knolwedge leads to those skills being undervalued at a senior level. And dont get me onto the basic 'field skills' of email, calendar and task management and report writing! Attempts by the NHS to develop this capability and capacity have failed time and again - the NHS Modernisation Agency, NHS Institute for Innovation and a range of successors have always been on the fringes and never mainstream for a variety of reasons.

My final observation relates to the NHS and IT - an area I have always been closely involved with. Large NHS IT projects whether nationally, regionally or locally have never been a career enhancing prospect for thrusting Chief Executives and Directors. A major Electronic Patient Record (EPR) implementation may take more than 8 years to deliver any significant benefits and needs constant focus and support to ensure staff and patients get the best out of the system rather than finding ways around it. It is interesting to note that there are few if any independent peer-reviewed research papers into the benefits of EPR - not that I am saying there are no benefits but that health organisations are bad at systematically identifying and measuring benefit not least because to do so shows the level of cost outweighs benefit for 5 or more years and this is not a comfortable message in a business case where savings are an urgent priority.

The result of this is that senior leadership (managerial and clinical) engagement with IT is not wholehearted (with a few notable exceptions) and as a result the deep knowledge of the fundamentals of the application of technology to the business is not as well embedded as it is in many other industries.

Fin

Expand full comment
Steve H's avatar

Great article and great report, Sam. I have three twists to suggest to what you have found:

1. It’s not only the most senior and experienced clinicians who are leaving; the same has been true of non-clinical leaders too. It started with the Langley “reforms” and never really stopped.

2. The NHS is routinely, massively, outcompeted on pay and conditions for managers by the private sector. So the managers who it does employ are a mixture of the selfless and the really not very competent.

3. In your description of the reasons why staff have left, you cited workload and pay etc. But there is also just the sheer grinding awfulness of the working conditions: petty decisions that often feel very performative and have a big impact on people’s stress levels. Some of it is caused by the lack of experienced managers, which leads to poor operational decisions.

Expand full comment
22 more comments...

No posts