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04 January 2007 / Richard Scorer
Issue: 7254 / Categories: Features
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NHS on trial

Richard Scorer explains why decisions regarding changes in the NHS are increasingly heading to the courts

 The NHS is undergoing huge change. Reform is taking two main forms, privatisation and ‘reconfiguration’. Privatisation involves the contracting out of specific services to private companies eg NHS Logistics to DHL. Reconfiguration is explained in the Department of Health white paper, Our Health Our Care Our Say: a New Direction for Community Services, 30 January 2006, as a “strategic shift” in the delivery of health care with fewer patients treated in hospital and more services delivered closer to home.
Both types of reform are controversial. Privatisation is particularly contentious within the trade unions and the Labour Party. Reconfiguration is generating a significant public backlash. This is because the shift towards specialist centres and community care is resulting in the loss or downgrading of many familiar district hospital services eg accident and emergency, maternity and paediatric services.

Another aspect of the current situation is that, despite the most sustained period of funding growth ever, the NHS is in financial crisis. In

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NEWS
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A Court of Appeal ruling has clarified that ‘rent’ must be monetary—excluding tenants paid in labour from statutory protection. In this week's NLJ, James Naylor explains Garraway v Phillips, where a tenant worked two days a week instead of paying rent
Three men wrongly imprisoned for a combined 77 years have been released—yet received ‘not a penny’ in compensation, exposing deep flaws in the justice system. Writing in NLJ this week, Dr Jon Robins reports on Justin Plummer, Oliver Campbell and Peter Sullivan, whose convictions collapsed amid discredited forensics, ‘oppressive’ police interviews and unreliable ‘cell confessions’
A quiet month for employment cases still delivers key legal clarifications. In his latest Employment Law Brief for NLJ, Ian Smith reports that whistleblowing protection remains intact even where disclosures are partly self-serving, provided the worker reasonably believes they serve the ‘public interest’ 
Family law must shift from conflict-driven litigation to child-centred problem-solving, according to a major new report. Writing in NLJ this week, Caroline Bowden of Anthony Gold outlines findings showing overwhelming support for reform, with 92% agreeing lawyers owe duties to children as well as clients
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