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50,000 NHS job losses uncovered by False Economy
#1
According to some of the comments in the Guardian and False Economy website this is under estimated.

Quote:Spreadsheet of NHS cut details here
The NHS is supposed to be protected from the public sector cuts. But new research shows that more than 50,000 jobs are disappearing from the NHS
The results come from freedom of information responses, which reveal for the first time the extent of cuts by local health trusts struggling to save £20bn from their budgets.
The survey, by the union-funded website False Economy, is the most up-to-date picture of the effects of efficiency savings in the NHS and reveals that in England alone, 24,000 posts will be lost in hospitals, another 10,000 will go in primary care trusts and 6,000 will disappear from mental health trusts.
The full data is below. What can you do with it?


False Economy, which formally launches today, can reveal that more than 50,000 NHS staff posts are set for the axe, destroying government claims that the NHS is in safe hands.
Health secretary Andrew Lansley said in April 2010 of possible NHS job cuts under Labour: "They will cut the number of nurses, the number of doctors and the number of hospital beds. It does not get more frontline than that."
[Image: dcposter.jpg]Original Conservative Party election poster.
David Cameron then famously claimed before the election that he would "cut the deficit, not the NHS".
However less than 10 months into the coalition government, the reality couldn't be more different, with NHS cuts across the country including:
  • East Lancashire Hospitals NHS Trust, which expects to shed 1,013 full-time equivalent staff from 2010-15, including almost 50 doctors and dental staff, and 270 nurses, midwives and health visitors.
  • Wirral University Teaching Hospital NHS Foundation Trust, which is cutting 682 full-time equivalent posts between 2010 and 2013. 110 posts have already gone.
  • University Hospital of North Staffordshire NHS Trust, who are currently forecasting a reduction of 1,349 full-time posts from 2011-15, which is 22.5 per cent of its entire staff.
  • Countess of Chester Hospital NHS Foundation Trust, who expect to cut 461 full-time posts by 2015 a 16 per cent reduction, including a 12 per cent cut in nurses, midwives and health visitors.
  • Belfast Health and Social Care Trust, which is cutting 1,755 full-time posts in 2010-11 nearly a nine per cent net reduction in one year, including 120 doctors and dentists, and 620 nurses.
  • Royal Devon and Exeter NHS Foundation Trust, who plan to shed 1,115 full-time posts from 2011-14, mainly through natural turnover.
The total confirmed, planned and potential NHS staff cuts across the country currently stands at just over 53,150 posts and that's before a host of trusts are expected to announce staff cuts over the next four months, including all Wales' health boards.
The national total is already twice the previous estimate of 27,000 job cuts, published by the Royal College of Nursing (RCN) last November.
The cuts in mental health trusts are particularly acute, with cuts of over 15 per cent at the following NHS Trusts; Coventry and Warwickshire Partnership, Derbyshire Mental Health Services, Mersey Care, and Kent and Medway and Social Care Partnership Trust.
Our figures have been collated for the most part from NHS trusts themselves under the Freedom of Information Act but also include figures sourced by the RCN Frontline First campaign, as well as press reports and foundation trusts' annual plans published by the national regulator Monitor.
The figures are, where possible, given as full-time equivalents, net of any recruitment of new staff. They include the 4,000 job cuts recently predicted by Northern Irish health minister Michael McGimpsey over the next four years, plus 3,000 job cuts previously announced by NHS trusts that are now subject to revision.
While most of the cuts are likely to be achieved through natural wastage rather than compulsory redundancies, it is hard to see how 20 per cent staff cuts such as those planned by Heart of England NHS Foundation Trust can be achieved without directly impacting on patient care.
TUC General Secretary Brendan Barber said: "False Economy's new research on NHS job cuts gives the lie to government claims that the NHS was safe in their hands. Not only are they reorganising the NHS in a way that strips out many of its founding principles, but also insisting on immediate cuts that will certainly harm frontline services. To echo Andrew Lansley, it does not get much more frontline than that."
http://falseeconomy.org.uk/blog/more-tha...job-losses
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