The fact is that it costs more for the private sector to raise the money to build a hospital, or anything else, than it costs Central Government.
Customer feedback includes, (Courtesy of the DT)
Doctors have told the BMA that because the consortium also runs the building, it can be incredibly difficult to get anything done; one noted it took weeks to get a notice-board hung, another said that reconfiguring a colonoscopy clinic to meet patients’ needs took years.
This “straitjacket of provision” – the day-to-day control that consortiums build in to their contracts – disturbs Liberal Democrat MP Norman Lamb. He was horrified to discover that his local hospital – Norfolk and Norwich NHS Hospital, another early PFI build – was negotiated on such poor rates that the local Trust was deep in the red trying to pay for it. When the rates were reconfigured in 2003, two years after it opened, the NHS hardly benefited, but the consortium did, by about £70 million.
The problems, he warns, don’t end with the initial negotiations. “The next 30 years are going to show a revolution in health care – yet we will be committed to services designed in the Nineties and early Noughties. These will become redundant. And at the end of the leases, we don’t even end up with the buildings as the consortiums retain ownership.”
Last edited by: Meldrew on Tue 31 May 11 at 18:02
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