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Tories aim to scrap NHS targets Tories aim to scrap NHS targets
(about 5 hours later)
Conservative leader David Cameron is to announce plans to scrap many of the government's health targets including those on waiting times. Conservative leader David Cameron has announced plans to scrap many of the government's health targets including those on waiting times.
Instead he will outline plans to set new objectives to measure the effectiveness of treatments and the health of patients afterwards. Instead he outlined plans to set new objectives to measure the effectiveness of treatments and the health of patients afterwards.
He also wants doctors to have greater control over budgets and priorities. He said doctors should have greater control over budgets and priorities.
Mr Cameron added that the quality of healthcare in the UK should "exceed the European average".
'Big change'
Mr Cameron said: "We will replace the national top-down targets that can distort clinical decisions with objectives that measure the overall benefit to patients."
He added: "We will put GPs in the driving seat by introducing proper commissioning so that the NHS is geared to the needs of patients, rather than the consequence of bureaucratic decision making."
Mr Cameron went on: "This is a big change in the way we look at health.
"Tony Blair's great pledge was to raise health spending in Britain to the European average.
"Our aim is different - we won't just concentrate on the money going in, but on what comes out as well. We want to raise health outcomes to exceed the European average.
"Outcomes like the survival rate for cancer, strokes and heart attacks. These are the real measures of good healthcare."
Shadow health secretary Andrew Lansley said "one-size fits all targets isn't the right way forward".Shadow health secretary Andrew Lansley said "one-size fits all targets isn't the right way forward".
He added, on BBC One's Politics Show: "The NHS should be measuring the overall outcome. And for cancer patients, for example, five-year survival rates is the way to do it. He told the BBC: "The NHS should be measuring the overall outcome. And for cancer patients, for example, five-year survival rates is the way to do it.
"Narrowing in on how long people wait for specific treatments is actually distorting the whole process. ""Narrowing in on how long people wait for specific treatments is actually distorting the whole process. "
Former Health Secretary Stephen Dorrell, who heads the group which helped draw up the policy, said patients would benefit from the new targets.Former Health Secretary Stephen Dorrell, who heads the group which helped draw up the policy, said patients would benefit from the new targets.
"We have endless forms about process and insufficient focus on the health results that the NHS exists to deliver and it is that focus that we are seeking to shift away from process towards health outcomes," he said."We have endless forms about process and insufficient focus on the health results that the NHS exists to deliver and it is that focus that we are seeking to shift away from process towards health outcomes," he said.
Dr Hamish Meldrum of the British Medical Association's GPs committee said he would welcome measures to assess how well patients are treated but added he wanted to know more about how the Conservative policy would work.Dr Hamish Meldrum of the British Medical Association's GPs committee said he would welcome measures to assess how well patients are treated but added he wanted to know more about how the Conservative policy would work.