Prime Minister orders regular ward rounds, nurse leadership and reduced bureaucracy (UK)

Leadership in Health Services

ISSN: 1751-1879

Article publication date: 27 April 2012

293

Keywords

Citation

(2012), "Prime Minister orders regular ward rounds, nurse leadership and reduced bureaucracy (UK)", Leadership in Health Services, Vol. 25 No. 2. https://doi.org/10.1108/lhs.2012.21125baa.005

Publisher

:

Emerald Group Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2012, Emerald Group Publishing Limited


Prime Minister orders regular ward rounds, nurse leadership and reduced bureaucracy (UK)

Article Type: News and views From: Leadership in Health Services, Volume 25, Issue 2

Keywords: Nurse leadership, Healthcare standards in NHS, National leadership in healthcare

David Cameron has called for wider uptake of intentional nursing rounds and reduced bureaucracy, and established a nurse review group to address concerns about NHS care standards.

The Prime Minister praised nurses but said he had concerns about standards of care being provided in some areas. He called for several nursing initiatives to be taken up and extended.

He said: “We need an NHS which ensures that every patient is cared for with compassion and dignity in a clean environment.

“If we want dignity and respect, we need to focus on nurses and the care they deliver. Somewhere in the last decade the health system has conspired to undermine one of this country’s greatest professions. It’s not one problem in particular. It’s the stifling bureaucracy”.

As revealed by Nursing Times, Mr Cameron announced the creation of a Nurse Quality Forum group to lead the uptake of good practice and recommend ways of improving care standards.

It will be composed of nurses, nursing leaders and patients and be “charged with taking a national leadership role in promoting excellent care and ensuring good practice is adopted across the NHS”.

A Number 10 statement said: “The prime focus will then be to exhibit national leadership, to stimulate local action by those delivering care to address problems and promote the improvements needed across services”.

It is an extension of the NHS Future Forum, established in the spring to review government NHS policy. It is understood it will be chaired by Sally Brearley, a former nurse, expert on patient involvement and experience, and member of the National Quality Board.

Mid Staffs and others cases in recent years have sparked serious concern about care standards, with nurses often blamed.

Mr Cameron’s announcement also has echoes of the former administration’s Prime Minister’s Commission on the Future of Nursing and Midwifery, which was set up by Gordon Brown and reported in 2010.

For more information: www.nursingtimes.net

Related articles