NHS reforms attract criticism

NHS reforms attract criticismNext week there will be an emergency meeting and a no confidence motion is what doctors are planning against the NHS restructuring and industrial action will also be called for by doctors in front of the Health Secretary Andrew Lansley at the meeting.

In case a clear consent of support does not come for it then on the reforms and withdrawal of the Health and Social Care is will what representatives of the 140,000-member British Medical Association will hear demands about the Government holding a public referendum.

In January the bill was published and it was seen that privatization and increasing the competition was what the government intended and doctors are angry about these reforms.

The BNA’s policy of critical engagement is what ministers have failed to respond to and this has just increased criticism of the policy and the scenario states that in the next week’s meeting, the policy will just get opposition.

In the upcoming meeting, the two sides are expected to attend to a heated argument about how to take the right step. And it is expected that the meeting will be attended by 350 representatives of consultants, GPs and junior doctors.

Laurence Buckman, chair of the GPs committee of the BMA, said, “There is a lot in the bill we don't like, like the commercialization of the NHS.”