These little-known commercial bodies could run health services. Are they legal?

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Northerner

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Unless you work in the NHS itself, or inhabit the health policy bubble of academics, thinktanks and staff groups, chances are the phrase “accountable care organisations” means little. If so, you would be forgiven for not knowing that ACOs, their acronym in NHS speak, and their close relation “accountable care systems”, are – in Simon Stevens’s view at least – the best way to save the health service from the otherwise unsquarable circle of rising demand and constrained funding.

Under NHS England’s plans, ACOs are supposed to bring together providers and commissioners of health and social care services who will then assume joint responsibility for the health of an entire area’s population. So far, eight areas have signed up to become ACOs although they are still only in nascent and shadow form. Stevens expects them to “deliver fast-track improvements”, such as fewer emergency hospitalisations and better care in people’s homes. Yet despite the scale of the change such a move envisages, so far ACOs have remained firmly under the radar, with minimal media coverage or public debate.

https://www.theguardian.com/society/2017/nov/07/vital-nhs-account-acos-legal-challenge
 
Fewer emergency hospital admissions?

Stop an entire population having accidents or getting seriously ill?

Never heard anything so ridiculous in my life!
 
Yet another very expensive layer of bureaucracy, rather than expenditure on front-line care. I'm tempted to say "What a load of cobblers." But I won't.
 
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