Did Bruce Keogh publish
two reports yesterday? After reading the responses of health service
professionals, and then those from the right leaning part of the Fourth Estate,
this
was the impression given. And anyone still believing that those NHS
doomsayers who scrabble around the dunghill that is Grubstreet have patients’
interests at heart will have been roundly disabused of that notion.
Consider first those who work in and around the NHS: the
Royal College of Surgeons (RCS) talks of universal adoption of best
practice, eliminating mistakes in surgery, and especially “the right levels of staff and support services to consistently provide
seven days a week care” (most of the Trusts covered by the review had cut
staffing levels since 2010).
Roy
Lilley, as ever of independent mind, says “Bruce Keogh's Review is the best NHS report I have ever read... and
I've read a few since 1974”. Rather him than me. He picks up on this key
quote: “the complexity of using and
interpreting aggregate measures of mortality, including HSMR and SHMI. The fact
that the use of these two different measures of mortality to determine which
trusts to review generated two completely different lists of outlier trusts
illustrates this point. However tempting it may be, it is clinically meaningless and academically reckless to use such
statistical measures to quantify actual numbers of avoidable deaths”.
And Lilley also quotes this from Keogh: “It is important to understand that mortality
in all NHS hospitals has been falling over the last decade: overall mortality
has fallen by about 30% and the improvement is even greater when the increasing
complexity of patients being treated is taken into account”. That one didn’t
make the papers.
Instead, despite Keogh himself rebutting the wilder claims
from the weekend – such as the flagrantly dishonest “13,000 deaths” one – the press has doubled down on them. “Damning
probe into 13,000 deaths” thundered the Sun. And again, readers are told “13,000 people died needlessly”.
The Mail is on the
same page – no surprise there – with “Labour's
day of shame over the NHS: Thousands of unnecessary deaths, 14 hospital trusts
condemned, and now devastating report demolished Labour's claim that the NHS
was safe in its hands”. Did Keogh mention any political party? You know
the answer to that one.
This is reinforced by the preposterously puffed-up Simon
Heffer (who goes private) telling “The
day Labour lost the moral high ground on the NHS”. The Trusts covered
by the Keogh Review are
labelled “death-traps”. You might
not have known that the mortality rates that prompted the process are from after the 2010 General Election. Keogh
reported on what was found three years
after that event.
The Tories and their press pals are in a terribly draughty glasshouse right now.
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