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Primary care trust plans spark concern

Posted: 01 September 2005 | Subscribe Online


Health and social care partnerships could be broken up by the current review of primary care trusts, even though improving joint working is one of its key aims.

There are fears among smaller unitary councils, several of which share boundaries with PCTs, that the government's drive to halve the number of trusts will threaten partnerships.

One local government leader said: "There will be winners and losers. It's not looking good for the smaller unitaries."

Strategic health authorities, which manage the performance of PCTs, are drawing up plans for reorganisation in their areas, which will be submitted to the Department of Health next month.
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The DH wants to reduce the 303 PCTs to about 150 to save £250m and improve partnership working, by ensuring council and trust boundaries, as far as possible, coincide. However, the drive to cut costs could encourage SHAs to bring together smaller PCTs that share boundaries with councils.

Jo Webber, policy manager at the NHS Confederation, said: "Partnerships need to be telling SHAs that what they are doing is working and PCTs need to be saying 'let's not throw out what we've learned and the relationships we've made'."


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