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Johnson wants 'personalised' NHS | Johnson wants 'personalised' NHS |
(about 2 hours later) | |
The health secretary said he wants to turn the NHS in England into a more "personalised" service. | |
Alan Johnson told Labour's spring conference in Birmingham that the days of a "one-size-fits-all" NHS are over and people should have more choice. | |
He repeated his pledge for GPs to open at weekends and evenings. | |
And said extended opening hours are not just useful for commuters and hard-pressed City "hot shots" but for hourly paid manual workers as well. | |
Loggerheads | Loggerheads |
Mr Johnson said: "The days of patients being the passive recipients of one-size-fits-all service are over." | |
While pointing to "dramatic reductions" in deaths from cancer and heart disease, he said the NHS faced new challenges, such as obesity, growing mental health problems and an ageing population. | |
The government and doctors' union, the British Medical Association, have been at loggerheads over the plans for extended surgery opening hours. | The government and doctors' union, the British Medical Association, have been at loggerheads over the plans for extended surgery opening hours. |
Mr Johnson urged GPs to accept the deal, which will see an average-sized practice with 6,000 patients open an extra three hours a week. | |
Mr Johnson told delegates: "I hope that GPs will agree to provide extra appointments at weekends or evenings. This is not just for the benefit of commuters who struggle to see their Doctor. | |
"When surgeries in Canary Wharf opened early in the morning their first patients were not city hot shots, but hourly paid manual workers who lost money, or worse their jobs, if they didn't go to work." | |
Carer changes | Carer changes |
Labour has made reform of public services the key theme of its spring conference, with Schools Secretary Ed Balls pledging to speed up Labour's academy schools programme, which has proved controversial with local education authorities. | |
Women's minister Harriet Harman is also expected to outline plans to allow people caring for elderly relatives to go out to work without losing benefits in what she will dub "the granny state". | Women's minister Harriet Harman is also expected to outline plans to allow people caring for elderly relatives to go out to work without losing benefits in what she will dub "the granny state". |
Ms Harman told BBC One's Andrew Marr programme the changes would mean people "who care for elderly relatives don't have to throw in their jobs". | Ms Harman told BBC One's Andrew Marr programme the changes would mean people "who care for elderly relatives don't have to throw in their jobs". |
She is expected to tell delegates that just as Labour had transformed "stay-at-home mum" into the working mother through Child Tax credits, it would now transform the "stay-at-home daughter" who looks after elderly relatives into the working daughter. | She is expected to tell delegates that just as Labour had transformed "stay-at-home mum" into the working mother through Child Tax credits, it would now transform the "stay-at-home daughter" who looks after elderly relatives into the working daughter. |
Carers are currently entitled to an allowance of £48 a week - but only if they earn no more than £95 a week. If they earn more they lose the right to an allowance. |