The Five Health Frontiers , livre ebook

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'A brilliant exposé' - Danny Dorling


Covid-19 has exposed the limits of a neoliberal public health orthodoxy. But instead of imagining radical change, the left is stuck in a rearguard action focused on defending the NHS from the wrecking ball of privatisation.


Public health expert Christopher Thomas argues that we must emerge from Covid-19 on the offensive - with a bold, new vision for our health and care. He maps out five new frontiers for public health and imagines how we can move beyond safeguarding what we have to a radical expansion of the principles put forward by Aneurin Bevan, the founder of the NHS, over 70 years ago.


Beyond recalibrating our approach to healthcare services, his blueprint includes a fundamental redesign of our economy through Public Health Net Zero; a bold new universal public health service fit to address the real causes of ill health; and a major recalibration in the efforts against the epidemiological reality of an era of pandemics.


Abbreviations

List of Tables

Acknowledgements

Preface

Introduction

1. The NHS Frontier

2. The Social Justice Frontier

3. The Economic Frontier

4. The Social Care Frontier

5. The Sustainability Frontier

6. The Public Health New Deal

Epilogue: Labour’s Medicine

Notes

Index

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Date de parution

20 janvier 2022

Nombre de lectures

1

EAN13

9780745343945

Langue

English

The Five Health Frontiers
A brilliant expos of how the political left in Britain is unaware of, and can start to begin to address, the effects of ever-increasing opting-out from public health and care services by those who can.
-Danny Dorling, Professor of Geography, University of Oxford
The boldest blueprint for public health since Bevan.
-Sonia Adesara, NHS Doctor and Campaigner
The ideas in this book are as significant and radical as the birth of the NHS, it shows a new, fairer vision for improving the health of the nation and a comprehensive plan for how to do it.
-Shirley Cramer, former CEO of the Royal Society for Public Health
A vital book that shows just how broken the health status quo truly is. Thomas s work will arm campaigners to demand a better, more just public health system - and to defend human life against corporate exploitation.
-Dr Aseem Malhotra, author of A Statin-Free Life and Founder of Public Health Collaboration
A well-argued plan to bring together health, social and economic justice.
-Andy McDonald MP
The Five Health Frontiers
A New Radical Blueprint
Christopher Thomas
First published 2022 by Pluto Press
New Wing, Somerset House, Strand, London WC2R 1LA
www.plutobooks.com
Copyright Christopher Thomas 2022
The right of Christopher Thomas to be identified as the author of this work has been asserted in accordance with the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act 1988.
British Library Cataloguing in Publication Data
A catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library
ISBN 978 0 7453 4393 8 Hardback
ISBN 978 0 7453 4392 1 Paperback
ISBN 978 0 7453 4395 2 PDF
ISBN 978 0 7453 4394 5 EPUB


This book is printed on paper suitable for recycling and made from fully managed and sustained forest sources. Logging, pulping and manufacturing processes are expected to conform to the environmental standards of the country of origin.
Typeset by Stanford DTP Services, Northampton, England
Simultaneously printed in the United Kingdom and United States of America
Contents
Abbreviations
List of Tables
Acknowledgements
Preface

Introduction
1. The NHS Frontier
2. The Social Justice Frontier
3. The Economic Frontier
4. The Social Care Frontier
5. The Sustainability Frontier
6. The Public Health New Deal
Epilogue: Labour s Medicine

Notes
Index
Salus Populi Suprema Lex Esto
The health of the people should be the supreme law
Marcus Tullius Cicero
To Alex
Abbreviations
A E
Accident and Emergency
ADASS
Association of Directors of Adult Social Services
CSR
Corporate Social Responsibility
CQC
Care Quality Commission
DHSC
Department of Health and Social Care
DWP
Department for Work and Pensions
GHSI
Global Health Security Index
GND
Green New Deal
GNP
Gross National Product
IEA
Institute of Economic Affairs
IPPR
Institute for Public Policy Research
MHCLG
Ministry of Housing, Communities and Local Government
NCS
National Care Service
NEF
New Economics Foundation
NHS
National Health Service
NICE
The National Institute for Health and Care Excellence
NILSS
National Independent Living Support Service
NPM
New Public Management
OECD
The Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development
OFG
Office for Future Generations
ONS
Office for National Statistics
PFI
Private Finance Initiative(s)
PHE
Public Health England
PHND
Public Health New Deal
PHN-ZERO
Public Health Net Zero
SAGE
Scientific Advisory Group on Emergencies
SDIL
Soft Drinks Industry Levy
TB
Tuberculosis
TUC
Trade Unions Congress
UTB
Universalise the Best
List of Tables
1.1 Five Shifts to Realise Universalise the Best in the NHS
3.1 Proposed Powers for a New Government Public Health Unit
4.1 Location of Deaths, Selected European Countries and the UK
5.1 Description of a Sample of EIDs of Significant Concern
5.2 The Safe Operating Space for Humanity, Global Public Health
6.1 Costing the NHS Frontier
6.2 Costing the Social Justice Frontier
6.3 Costing the Social Care Frontier
6.4 Total Investment for a Public Health New Deal
6.5 Under 75 Mortality Rate per 100,000 Population, England, by Region
E.1 Labour Lead on Healthcare Ahead of Election
Acknowledgements
It s not always easy to write a book about health during a health crisis. Combining a day job researching health and care with evenings and weekends spent thinking and writing about the implications of the pandemic could at times be oppressive. There were moments I wanted nothing more than to stop, hide away and think about anything else. But this has been a universal experience for many of us over the last 15 months, each witness to the deadly nature of the pandemic and the personal cost of failures in government policy.
In other moments, I felt incredibly privileged. Privileged to have had the opportunity to channel my fear and frustration into the catharsis of imagining what radical change must now follow - and might just become possible. There are few better coping mechanisms.
I could not be more grateful to Pluto Press for publishing this book. Neda Tehrani was an immediate champion for my book from the proposal. She has pushed it in ambition, scope and relevance ever since, for which I m hugely grateful. Others have made huge contributions throughout the writing process. I appreciate the feedback given by my parents, by Harry Quilter-Pinner at the IPPR on an early draft, and from many others who read chapters or who listened to me read it out loud.
This book would not have been possible without the immense work from the academic and policy community. I am lucky to be able to draw from such a large base of fascinating research and scholarship - it s a book built on the shoulders of giants. I hope what follows does some justice in translating our fantastic evidence into big policy ideas.
Most of all, though, my thanks to Alex - who has managed to be my partner while I dedicated weekends, evenings and early mornings to writing this book over the last 18 months. There is an irony that the health consequences of stress, overwork and burnout are covered in some detail - but she helped ensure I got through all these experiences safe and sound. Sometimes there has been joy, and sometimes it has been a dark and frustrating process. For being there and sharing in both, thank you.
Preface
The idea for this book came well before Covid-19. For a few years, I d had a half-written book proposal saved in an out-the-way part of my computer. It emerged from my growing sense that there was something deeply wrong with how our public health system works - a fundamental discordance between health today and the democratic socialist ideals upon which the National Health Service (NHS) was founded in 1948.
Often, we chalk health up in the left-wing win column. We talk lovingly about the UK s system of universal care, based on need rather than identity, income, or ability to pay. But the brutal reality is that our public health system still distributes the best health to the people with the most money or power, and the worst health to the poorest and most marginalised.
Today, the most disadvantaged people in our country struggle most to access the healthcare that they need, and experience substantially worse outcomes when it comes to both length and quality of life. These injustices were not eradicated by the advent of the NHS - and they have been observed both in periods in which the health service has had plenty, and in periods where it has been starved of funding.
When news first broke of a new infectious disease spreading across the world, in the first days of 2020, I remember feeling confident we d be okay. The UK was in an incredibly privileged position. We re an advanced economy, we re an island, we had a well-regarded infectious disease surveillance system, we have universal healthcare, people aren t denied tests, vaccines, or treatments as a rule, and we have an influential role in the global health system. 1
It quickly became clear that any such confidence was misplaced. To the horror of most in the health, medical and scientific communities - as well as the public - almost everything that could go wrong, did go wrong. Communication was poor and action was often lagging. In March 2020, large sporting and music events carried on, even as infection rates climbed. Lockdowns were repeatedly implemented too late. Test and Trace was established, cancelled, re-announced and then outsourced to disastrous consequence and cost. All the while, tens of thousands of people died.
In an article on The Plague , Jacqueline Rose describes Albert Camus presentation of the pestilence as both blight and revelation . 2 My revelation from this pestilence was that, while exasperated by bad policy decisions during the pandemic itself, many of the problems we faced weren t new. Rather, Covid-19 exposed and exploited structural problems that already existed, only now at a huge scale. In many cases, those structural problems were the same as the ones I had written of in my half-written book proposal.
In some parts, this book tells a story of the discrepancy between the NHS as it exists today, and the intentions and principles set out by Nye Bevan when he founded the service in the late 1940s. But it is quite a different story to the one told in the health books that have come before it. Often, interventions that cover the health service only take aim at the failures of neoliberals, libertarians, conservatives and right-wingers - usually, by sounding the alarm about privatisation. By contrast, this book is just as interested in taking a critical look at the left s strategies to save our NHS. Specifically, it asks why the stories we tell - and the perennial rear-guard action we employ to defend against the wrecking ball of privatisation - are no longer proving either effective or sustainable.
And while it would be difficult to write a book on health without talking about the NH

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