There is a harsh reality. Although we refer to the NHS as a national service, it is more of a federated service consisting of over 400 individual care providers. But negative stories that are so often highlighted are fortunately not typical of the NHS as a whole.
In contrast I attended the Health Service Journal 2013 Awards this week, which had a record number of entries, with 139 organisations and 185 projects recognised on the shortlist as providers of healthcare excellence. I witnessed a gathering of over 1,500 healthcare professionals, three quarters of whom were clinicians. There were some 22 award categories from acute sector innovation, to improving partnerships between health and local government, to provider trust of the year to mention just a few. This was the biggest assembly of NHS awards ever recorded, said HSJ editor Alastair McLellan.
He said: “Year after year, award winners tell us how winning a HSJ Award has boosted their projects, raised morale and helped with securing backing and finance. Much of the best practice now common in the NHS began with schemes which were more widely adopted following their success at the HSJ Awards. Winners can inspire NHS organisations elsewhere, helping to safeguard patient care through the encouragement of innovation and healthcare excellence at a time when the NHS is under the spotlight.”
There was a definite buzz and excellence and quality of good practice just flowed and filled the Great Ballroom of the Grosvenor House Hotel and surely the largest celebration of healthcare excellence.
The key for me is how do we promote these high standards of excellence consistently throughout the NHS to eradicate the bad news stories which we are seeing in the news?
Healthcare is a partnership between the providers and the patient. It fails to work if we continually distrust the quality of care. That is the role of the Care Quality Commission, and government initiatives such as the Friends and Family Test.
Thoughts welcome!
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