Showing posts with label primary sources. Show all posts
Showing posts with label primary sources. Show all posts

Wednesday, 29 June 2011

Without proof, who knows who said what? An update on damning the Archbishop of Canterbury without evidence

Totally out of the blue¸ and for no particular reason, today I’ve decided to provide an update on my first ever blog post.

It looks like Wikipedia is currently bang up to date, and may well continue to rapidly get updated depending on how extensive the fallout is over the coming days. More background reading is available from Brian Whelan, Oliver Kamm and Tim Worstall... and, somewhat bizarrely, Johann Hari himself.

Oh, what the hell, let's give the excellent Daily Mash a mention as well.

Sooo, what does Johann have to say... on twitter...

johannhari101 Johann Hari 
When interviewing a writer for a 6000-word profile, accurately quoting their writing is not "plagiarism" or "cut & paste journalism"

... and on his own website...


"So occasionally, at the point in the interview where the subject has expressed an idea, I’ve quoted the idea as they expressed it in writing, rather than how they expressed it in speech... Since my interviews are intellectual portraits that I hope explain how a person thinks, it seemed the most thorough way of doing it"

"This is... why, after doing what must be over fifty interviews, none of my interviewees have ever said they had been misquoted, even when they feel I’ve been very harsh on them in other ways"

"I called round a few other interviewers for British newspapers and they said what I did was normal practice and they had done it themselves from time to time. My test for journalism is always – would the readers mind you did this, or prefer it?"

"I’m open to suggestions from anyone who thinks there’s a better way of doing this"


"When I’ve been wrong in the past – as I shamefully was over the Iraq War – I have admitted it publicly, tried to think through how I got it wrong, and corrected myself. So I’ve thought carefully about whether I have been wrong here. It’s clearly not plagiarism or churnalism – but was it an error in another way? Yes. I now see it was wrong, and I wouldn’t do it again"

"Why? Because an interview is not just an essayistic representation of what a person thinks; it is a report on an encounter between the interviewer and the interviewee"

... and how about one of his employers...

Simon_Kelner Simon Kelner 
@JohannHari101 has worked at @theIndynews for 10 years. In that time, we have not had a single complaint about his misrepresenting anyone

So that's that then... but, but, but I hear you all ask (hello? anyone? anyone care?), what about Archbishop Michael Ramsey, and my first ever blog post? Did I ever get anywhere with getting to the bottom of what was increasingly looking like a groundless slur?

Well, yes and no.

First up, the Independent. I find it quite incredible that on Tuesday 28 June, Simon Kelner (editor-in-chief of The Independent) can claim that in 10 years no-one has ever complained about Johann Hari misrepresenting anyone. Although I guess it's easier to make such a claim when you don't bother monitoring the email address that you promote on your website for feedback.

Here's the first email that I sent to newseditor@independent.co.uk on Thursday 31 March:

Subject: Smearing the Archbishop of Canterbury

Dear Sir / Madam

I'd be interested to hear your views on whether an article in your paper smearing a dead individual should either include a link to a reliable primary source as evidence to support its claims or at the very least should be able to produce said evidence when challenged: http://alturl.com/4bcty

Let's face it, anyone can miss an email. So I emailed again on Thursday 7 April:

Hi, newseditor

Any thoughts?

And again, on Saturday 16 April - I even cc'd customerservices@independent.co.uk this time:

Hi - any thoughts?

So what response did I get? Well, the total response to my three emails, to two different email addresses was... nothing, nadda, zip, zero. Not. A. Dickie-bird. It's one way of being able to claim that you've had no complaints, I guess.

Now on to the main event. At the end of my first blog entry, I included an email that I sent to Johann Hari on Saturday 19 March. 

Here's the subsequent correspondence (slightly edited to remove some, mainly personal, details).

Johann replying on Sunday 20 March:

Chris, as I said, my copy of the book is packed away because I just moved, but I got it from God Is Not Great. You can email Christopher to ask him the origin of the quote. These websites also attribute the quote to the book or to him, you may want to ask them:

http://www.generationaldynamics.com/cgi-bin/D.PL?xct=gd.e070603
http://archive.frontpagemag.com/readArticle.aspx?ARTID=26792

Best wishes

Johann x

Me replying later on Sunday 20 March:

Thanks very much for your reply, Johann

I sent you one of those links, and didn't feel the need to send the other one, as it doesn't further things at all.

As I said, I bought the book as you told me that was your source. Two of us have read it, and can't find the quote. It's definitely not in the index or references.

As I also said, I'm sorry you felt the need to block me on Twitter. Your choice obviously, but I'm not sure what I actually did to warrant it...? I thought that would be the course of action when faced with abuse or obsession. Maybe the fact that you are good at replying to people is your weakness, as it then encourages people to contact you, which in turn can look like obsession. Or maybe I was abusive, but I'm not sure how...?

I still come back to my original question - did Archbishop Ramsey say that millions of people dying is just fine or not? If he did, when did he say it, where, in front of who, and why?

Apologies for sounding repetitive, but if I'm being unreasonable, do say. Is the above not the kind of question that journalists are expected to know the answer to? As I said, you chose to include the quote. No-one made you. Don't you want to be 100% sure that it's genuine and accurate?

Thanks again for your rapid reply, and apologies for being a nuisance. I don't know why, but I feel very strongly about this. Maybe it's the fact that a dead guy might need a friend... and trust me, if he did say it, he's no friend of mine.

Cheers

Chris

Me emailing again on Thursday 7 April (maybe I am a closet stalker):

After almost three weeks, I'm getting the distinct vibe that a further response from you is not imminent.

I've emailed Christopher Hitchens today, which is something that I really hoped I wouldn't have to do. I had thought that using a quote within an article brought with it certain responsibilities to satisfy yourself of its veracity, but I guess not. I'll let you know if he replies.

I still think it's a real shame you felt the need to block me from following you on Twitter on account of me having the audacity to question a quote that you chose to include in your article.

If you do have further information, I'd be very happy to update the below - not that anyone cares anyway...


Chris

Me again (cue the Psycho music) on Sunday 8 May - I had big news to share:

Good afternoon Johann

Christopher Hitchens has got back to me and confirmed that it wasn't Archbishop Michael Ramsey.

I was wondering therefore whether you would be interested in publishing a correction, as it is now clear that the quote is not attributable to Ramsey.

I also wonder whether you would agree that all this effort could be saved if you would just include primary sources within your articles.

The below article is a classic example:


If you start with a fact, why not reference that fact? Don't expect your readers to go away and check for it themselves - be helpful and include a reference so that it can be readily and easily looked at. You then go on to include more facts and several quotes. Given my experience of having to spend plenty of time tracking down a quote on your behalf (and finding it to be incorrect), it would also be immensely helpful if you provided references for these as well.

Cheers

Chris

Johann replying the same day:

Thanks Chris - I'll get the Indie to put a correction at the end... they have a policy of only linking to other Indie articles as sources.

Best wishes

Johann

Not knowing how long would be reasonable to allow for a correction to be published, I left it over a month, before eventually following up on Sunday 19 June:

Thanks very much for your email, Johann

I appreciate that it might take a while to correct the Indie article:


But hopefully you can correct the version on your own website quite quickly and easily:


I'm also delighted to see that you are now including references in your articles on your own website:


If the Indie continue to be difficult about including links to external websites, then I'd go for the George Monbiot approach:


• A fully referenced version of this article can be found on George Monbiot's website

Cheers

Chris

As at Wednesday 29 June (today), Johann hasn't replied, and neither version of his article includes a correction.

I'll continue to exercise patience, as I'm sure Johann has one or two things on his plate this week... I guess I'm just somewhat surprised he didn't manage to get around to publishing a correction before now, having eventually (!) accepted that Archbishop Michael Ramsey has been unfairly maligned.

Goodnight once more journalism, wherever you are

Chris

Wordle: Without proof update

Thursday, 2 June 2011

You are now entering The Twilight Zone, courtesy of Lansley, Cameron et al




My third post (this is my first post - boo, it's long; and this is my second - yay, it's short) on basically the same topic. Bit boring? Yes. Repetitive? Sure. Necessary? ABSOLUTELY!

Last night (Wednesday 1 June), the Telegraph published this article, penned by Secretary of State for Health Andrew Lansley. In it, he writes:

"We know that some of our outcomes for common conditions like cancer and strokes are not as good as they should be in comparison to the rest of Europe. For example, if our cancer survival rates were at the European average, we know we would save 5,000 extra lives a year. The same can be said of heart disease, where we could save 750 lives every year if our care was equivalent to the average in Europe"

I can't help but shake my head as I read this back. And the shaking occurs no matter how many times I read it back.

I refuse to play by the rules of this particularly repugnant game. The game is called Politics. And the rules are:

1. Make unsubstantiated claims to justify your political aims
2. Convert your claims into facts
3. Use said facts as compelling evidence for your political aims
3. Ignore the small minority that bothers to check your claims masquerading as facts
4. Repeat your dodgy facts as many times and in many different places as you possibly can (even better, share the load with your colleagues, and get them to peddle the same bilge)
5. Wait for small minority to lose the will
6. Sit back and enjoy as your unsubstantiated claims are increasingly accepted as facts

A refusal to follow rule number 5 explains my third blog post on this topic.

Having done a bit more digging, the first time that I can find reference to the 5,000 lives figure is in a Department of Health press release dated 3 October 2010. After that, we've got Improving Outcomes: A Strategy for Cancer, published by the Department of Health on 12 January 2011. Page 5 of the strategy states:

"Through the approaches this Strategy sets out, we aim to save an additional 5,000 lives every year by 2014/15"

Hold on, that's not nearly so juicy. Oh no, wait. Here we go. Page 7:

"To put this in context, if England was to achieve cancer survival rates at the European average, then 5,000 lives would be saved every year"

I guess it makes perfect political sense to quickly jump from an aspiration of saving 5,000 lives per year by 2014/15 (aiming to do something years in the future - yawn, that's not a good, instant soundbite, nor a compelling fact to justify major changes) to claiming that 5,000 lives per year could be saved right now (wow! Really? Change the NHS right away. Like now! What are you waiting for?).

There are four figures that have been wheeled out repeatedly as 'facts' to justify the NHS reforms. Indeed, the Government's glossy leaflet published on 6 June 2011 states that three of these 'facts' alone "compel us to modernise and improve our NHS".

When you add the four figures together, they amount to a claim that we could save 8,300 lives per year (5,000 lives from cancer; 2,000 lives from respiratory disease; 750 lives from heart disease; 550 lives from chronic live disease and cirrhosis) right now.

This is a huge claim. And to date, only one source has been made available to support a single one of the disease groups. And that source, relating to the 5,000 lives from cancer, was debunked (a tad harsh - nothing wrong with the actual source. The problem is how it has been twisted and used by politicians) weeks ago both here and here.

I first asked the Department of Health for the sources of their lives saved per year figures almost two months ago. Since then, I have asked both the Department and Number 10 for the sources more than two dozen times.

So far, I have received one reply, which by anyone's standards is a bit rubbish:

 Chris Mason 

Come on now - somebody, somewhere must have the will and the clout to put Cameron, Lansley, Burstow or Burns on the spot, and make them justify and provide the sources for these incredible claims.

Failing that, do at the very least join me in a daily 15 second task to tweet the Department of Health and Number 10 requesting the sources:

 Chris Mason 

Chris

Wordle: The Twilight Zone

Wednesday, 18 May 2011

A Groundhog Day speech that left me speechless




On Monday 16 May 2011, our Prime Minister delivered a speech at Ealing Hospital in which he included the following:

"If we had cancer survival rates at the average in Europe, we’d save 5,000 lives a year"

"If we had respiratory disease care equivalent to the average in Europe, we’d save 2,000 lives a year"

"If we could prevent and treat chronic liver disease and cirrhosis as well as the European average, we could save 550 lives a year"

I find this truly astonishing. I wrote a blog post about this on Saturday 9 April, highlighting that the cancer 'fact' was incredibly dodgy, and that neither the Department of Health nor Number 10 has even provided a source for the respiratory disease 'fact'. For over a month now I have been requesting a source and I am still waiting.

The 550 lives a year 'fact' is a new one and wasn't one of the three 'facts' included in the glossy pamphlet published on Wednesday 6 April. Out goes 750 lives saved from heart disease, in comes 550 lives saved from chronic liver disease and cirrhosis. Whichever 'fact' you look at however, the fact is that neither has been referenced or sourced.

Now, don't get me wrong, I'm not deluded enough to think that anyone in power reads or cares what I write or say. But when Ben Goldacre subsequently published this article in The Guardian on Saturday 16 April, I did think that maybe, just maybe this would give the Coalition Government pause for thought (and what more fitting time to pause for thought than during a 'natural' break in the passage of the NHS reform bill, and even better - during a national listening exercise!) and reflection as to whether they really want to keep quoting such unsubstantiated and potentially misleading figures.

Am I the only one who gets incredibly, unbelievably and supremely annoyed, irritated and ticked off about all this? 

Fiddle your expenses and you'll get pilloried. Peddle dodgy facts and if you do it enough times and for long enough, then the minority that query them either lose the will or have no voice to challenge them in the first place (or both).

Dear David Cameron - if you are claiming that right now we could save 7,550 lives per year, please could you provide full referenced and sourced material to explain and substantiate that fact. If you can do that, then I for one couldn't care less if you've got one of these behind your back or stuck down your trousers.

Chris




Wordle: Groundhog Day

Saturday, 9 April 2011

NHS reform: from liberating, to modernising, to pausing - but has anyone ever been listening?

Relax, I'm not going to even attempt to assess the proposed NHS reforms in anything like full. If you're looking for a much more learned analysis, then I would recommend the following Twitter luminaries:

@Paul_Corrigan
@HPIAndyCowper - Editor of Health Policy Insight
@ProfAlanMaynard - Professor of Health Economics, University of York
@DrEvanHarris
@nedwards_1
@jappleby123 - Chief Economist at the King's Fund
@martinmckee - Professor of European Public Health, London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine

What I am going to try to do is look at whether genuine efforts have been made to listen and address legitimate concerns that have been raised since the Con-Dem Government came to power on 12 May 2010 and the proposed NHS reforms were first pursued with gusto. I’m also passionate about the abuse of ‘facts’ to further political agendas, so that might also get a mention or two (if it’s a straight choice, for me, you can keep your dodgy expenses, but don’t try to get away with your dodgy facts – and definitely don’t trot them out over and over again once they’ve been outed as dodgy!).

The now infamous White Paper 'Equity and excellence: Liberating the NHS' was published by the Department of Health on 12 July 2010 (just two months after the Coalition took power - whatever your political hue, that's a very quick turnaround time to propose such major changes to such a major institution).

On the same day, Secretary of State for Health Andrew Lansley made a statement to Parliament concerning the White Paper. The statement lists challenges facing the NHS, including an increasing and ageing population, advances in medical technology and rising expectations.

On the very next day (13 July 2010), Sir David Nicholson, Chief Executive of the NHS, wrote a letter to all NHS Chief Executives and Chairs entitled ‘Liberating the NHS - Managing the transition’. This is a very significant letter. Depending on your point of view, it could represent good boy scout style planning (dib, dib, dob, dob, be prepared), or it could totally undermine a three month consultation period by telling all senior NHS staff the day after the consultation is launched that they better get on and deliver the key reforms, as time is of the essence, there's no alternative and there's no point in waiting.

The consultation period concerning the White Paper ran from 12 July to 5 October 2010, with a commitment made to publish all responses received in full. All of these groups responded.

On 15 December 2010, the Department of Health published its response to the consultation. It states that "substantial feedback" was received that "reaffirms the strong commitment to the reforms", with the document including various snippets from various responses.

Since January, I have been pursuing publication of the individual responses to the consultation. It was a brave and bold commitment to make by the Government, something that should be applauded. However, for the applause to start, the commitment must be honoured. I am yet to receive either a confirmation of when the responses will be published, or an explanation as to why the responses now won't be published. Cherry-picking certain responses to be included as evidence of support is very different to committing to publishing all responses received, unedited and unsanitised. In my humble opinion, anyway.

Fast forward to 6 April 2011, and we have this - Government launches NHS listening exerciseI have no idea what makes this pause a natural pause (seems like a supremely unnatural, exceptional pause to me), but leaving that aside, we have the Prime Minister David Cameron, the Deputy Prime Minister Nick Clegg, and the Secretary of State for Health Andrew Lansley all declaring their love for the NHS. 


We've also got Lansley saying that 90% of local authorities have signed up to play their part in improving services for patients (the only surprise here is surely why it isn't 100%, given the incredibly directive letter from the head of the NHS, David Nicholson, back in July 2010... or am I being unfair and cynical? The best analogy I've heard about this is that just because the lifeboats on the Titanic were used doesn't mean that the passengers approved of the ship going down).

To complement the launch of the ‘natural’ pause / ‘listening’ exercise, we were blessed with a leafletThe first interesting thing about this leaflet is that it's not produced by the Department of Health, but by the Prime Minister's Office (make of that what you will).

The next interesting thing about this leaflet is that almost the first words in it are "We love the NHS" in big, bold letters. What the founders of this website make of the appropriation of that emotive phrase, I can only guess at.

The leaflet then goes on to explain that the population is ageing (hang on, didn't Lansley explain that back in July last year when the White Paper was launched?). It has a brilliant summary to ram home the point:

"For the first time ever there are more pensioners in this country than there are children under 16. Clearly this is something to be welcomed..."

Really? Doesn't that depend on whether you prefer old people or children? And wouldn't lots of people actually have a neutral view of whether they'd prefer there to be more old people or children in England? It also has the much loved by some “No change is not an option” claim.

The leaflet then explains that advances in medical technology are making some treatments increasingly expensive (hang on, didn’t Lansley explain that as well back in July last year when the White Paper was launched?).

The leaflet then moves to what should be incredibly safe territory, but manages to make it potentially the most controversial ground. It starts off with the assertion that we want to have the best health service in the world. Well, ok, so far, so good (but seriously, which country wouldn’t want to have the best health service in the world?!? Obvious. Stating. The. Bleeding). We then have three figures that are presented as “facts”. This is absolutely critical, as the leaflet states:

These facts alone compel us to modernise and improve our NHS

Wow – sit up straight, concentrate. You’re about to see three facts that on their own justify the NHS reforms. Drum roll, please.

‘Fact’ one: if our NHS was world class, every year we would save an extra 750 lives from heart disease

No source is provided for this ‘fact’, which is a shocking omission. I therefore have been deprived the primary source with which to review and comment on this ‘fact’. I therefore do not view it as a ‘fact’. If you want me to engage with you, then engage properly with me. Don’t claim things if you can’t back them up. Mouth. Trousers.

‘Fact’ two: if our NHS was world class, every year we would save an extra 2,000 lives from respiratory disease

Different disease, different number of lives, but same fundamental problem and shameful omission. No primary source. I therefore do not view it as a ‘fact’. Money. Pudding.

Bad start (to put it mildly) – two out of three ‘facts’ down, one to go.

‘Fact’ three: if our NHS was world class, every year we would save an extra 5,000 lives from cancer

Different disease, different number of lives, and by jove, we have a source! The source is Abdel-Rahman et al, BJC Supplement, December 2009.

Before we look at the source, take a quick look at David Cameron’s speech on 6 April 2011, at the launch of the ‘listening’ exercise.

Hmmm, he’s steered clear of the heart disease figure completely (interesting? Possibly, possibly not). And he describes the other two figures as estimates. No wait, he’s calling them ‘facts’. No wait, he’s calling them both!

But if our NHS was performing at truly world-class levels, we could save literally hundreds more lives every week. It's estimated we would save an extra 5000 lives from cancer every year. An extra 2000 lives from respiratory disease every year. These facts alone compel us to modernise and improve our NHS

Am I alone in seeing a fundamental difference between estimates and facts? With apologies for the undergraduate style of referring to dictionary definitions, but it feels just about justifiable in this instance.

Fact:
- something that actually exists; reality; truth
- something known to exist or to have happened
- a truth known by actual experience or observation; something known to be true

Estimate:
- to form an approximate judgment or opinion regarding the worth, amount, size, weight, etc., of; calculate approximately
- to form an opinion of; judge
- to make an estimate;
- an approximate judgment or calculation, as of the value, amount, time, size, or weight of something

A difference? You decide.

Anyway, where were we… oh yes, ‘fact’ three and Abdel-Rahman et al. Having a source in the leaflet allows us to look at the source for ourselves. And me including the source in this blog allows you to look at it for yourselves, and not just take my view on it, or the excerpt that I choose to quote (a certain national journalist who chose to block me on Twitter might want to take note… not that I’m bitter or bear a grudge or anything).

What’s that you ask? Which excerpt would I personally choose to quote? Well, this one, as it goes:

We set out to estimate how many cancer deaths would have been avoided within 5 years of diagnosis if survival among patients diagnosed in Great Britain (England, Scotland and Wales) during 1985–1989, 1990–1994 and 1995–1999 had been equivalent either to the mean survival or to the highest survival seen in other European countries. Cancer survival has been improving in most European countries, so comparison with a shifting baseline is appropriate. Trends in avoidable mortality can be seen as an overall comparative measure of progress in cancer control between Britain and the rest of Europe

Actually, there’s more I would choose to quote, so I will (my dull blog, my dull rules):

For several cancers, survival in Britain was slightly higher than the mean survival in Europe

Avoidable premature mortality among cancer patients diagnosed in Britain during 1985–1999 has represented 6–7% of cancer-related mortality compared with the mean survival in Europe. Compared with the highest levels of survival in Europe, the reduction from 12.2% to 10.6% of cancer-related mortality reflects small but steady progress over the period 1985–2003

So, in summary, we’re making steady progress on cancer survival rates, and the study doesn’t look at any data beyond the year 2003. Hmmm, well, it’s 2011 now. The latest cohort of patients looked at in the study were diagnosed with cancer between 1995-1999.

Since then, we’ve had the NHS Cancer Plan, published on 27 September 2000. It includes the following:

Despite the best efforts of the NHS staff and cancer patients across the country, decades of under-investment alongside outdated practices mean that survival rates for many of the major cancers lag behind the rest of Europe

Well that sounds like it roughly tallies with what Abdel-Rahman et al estimated in their study. Lest we forget, their study came out in 2009. That’s one of the problems with healthcare. It’s complicated, and it takes a long time to review and study very complicated areas, like cancer survival rates.

The NHS Cancer Plan goes on:

The Cancer Plan is a practical document for the NHS and its partners, setting out the actions and milestones that will deliver the fastest improvement in cancer services anywhere in Europe over the next five years. By 2010, our five year survival rates for cancer will compare with the best in Europe

What, what?!? You mean the idea of looking at outcome measures, like survival rates, didn’t start with the new Coalition Government? Well I’ll be. And hang on a second, I’ve got a crazy idea… if Abdel-Rahman et all were able to provide interesting estimates about cancer survival rates in 2009 based on a cohort of patients between 1995-1999, maybe, just maybe we need to wait a while longer to know whether the NHS Cancer Plan has delivered what it set out to deliver.

Instead, what we get is a 2011 Government leaflet telling us that the NHS reforms must happen based on an historic estimate dressed up as a current and ongoing fact. Annoyed? Irritated? Disappointed? Me too!

I’m almost done (I’ve got some Jehovah’s Witnesses to bother), but just a couple more snippets from the 2000 NHS Cancer Plan:

The Plan will be supported by new funding, rising to an extra £570 million a year for cancer services by 2003/04. By 2006 there will be approaching 1,000 extra cancer specialists, more radiographers, more nurses, and targeted action to respond to shortages of other staff who contribute to cancer diagnosis and treatment. In partnership with voluntary organisations, with the New Opportunities Fund, and others, we shall extend the range and accessibility of cancer services right across the country. We cannot make all the changes overnight. But as the Plan is rolled out and milestones are reached, people will begin to see the improvement that will mean we no longer lag behind Europe, and in time will compare with the best in Europe

Now, honestly, hand on heart, politics aside, I really like the above paragraph. Why? Well, it’s easily understandable, it’s compelling, and above all, it’s realistic.

It’s basically saying, yeah, we know we’re not doing so well right now, not as well as we’d like, and certainly not as well as the best. So we’re going to splash some cash (quite a lot of cash!), we’re going to hire some extra staff (quite a lot of extra staff!), we’re going to work with others, including volunteers (extra, extra, read all about it – Big Society spotted 10 years earlier than thought!), and we’re not promising immediate improvements, but we’re working to a longer term plan.

Common sense and realism, innit. I can buy into that. Now what would be a fitting reward for such common sense and realism? Well, what wouldn’t be fair is if in the year 2011, one year after the deadline for the NHS Cancer Plan, we have a Government leaflet telling us that the NHS reforms absolutely have to happen because of our poor performance on cancer.

Even worse, the ‘fact’ in the leaflet pretty much pre-dates the NHS Cancer Plan being introduced.

Apologies, as I’ve droned on a bit about this one, and I could do a bit more, but I won’t (phew).

The leaflet then explains that we’ve now got more doctors (doctor graphic = white figure, with stethoscope) and fewer managers (manager graphic = black figure, with tie).

I could bang on about this as well, but I will leave it to the magnificent @RealDMitchell
and his astoundingly good article on this general topic.

Oh, just one point (sorry – indulge me). Yes, the leaflet does indeed more frequently refer to managers as bureaucrats (boo, hiss! They’re behind you, in front of you, beside you, getting in the way and being annoying).

What else is in the leaflet… well, in terms of fetching infographics, there’s one more doozie for me:

95 per cent of people want more choice over their healthcare

Not exactly groundbreaking stuff (who are the 5% that don’t want more choice?!? – I could have every sports channel known to mankind, and my wife would claim I already do, but if someone asked me if I wanted more choice of sport to watch, I’d still say yes), but the source is the really interesting part. It’s a figure from the 25th British Social Attitudes Survey.

This is a survey that has been running for more than two decades, providing a fantastic comparative source of exactly what it says on the tin – British social attitudes. It includes a range of questions about the NHS and healthcare.

The reason why it’s so interesting is that the Government leaflet has chosen to quote the figure from the survey just weeks after the Department of Health withdrew funding for said survey. Little bit weird? Little bit shifty? Little bit dodgy? The survey is good enough to provide a source for why the NHS reforms must happen, but not good enough to be funded, despite such funding having been in place for more than 25 years.

Thankfully the King’s Fund are going to step in to help save some of the questions in the survey.

Check out the stats and graph from the latest (27th) survey, and make your own mind up about whether there may be more to it than just a minor cost saving as to why the Government no longer wants to fund the survey (hint: that worm is on a steep upward trajectory over the last three years. If it was a cricket run chase, you'd think someone like Boom Boom Afridi or Bash Bash Sehwag was having a grand old time - are they about to get clean bowled?). "I can't get no satisfaction" doesn't seem to be the theme song of the NHS in recent years - don't take my word for it, have a look at this.

Right, enough is surely enough. This was supposed to be a short, concise, focused entry. It’s got away from me, and I sincerely thank anyone who has made it this far.

My closing comments would be that I am incredibly unimpressed with what has happened over the last few months. We’ve had a public consultation that was looking like being open and transparent, but ended up being almost immediately undermined by behind the scenes directives, and a failure to publish what key groups thought about the proposed reforms. And we’ve now got a public listening exercise that still has the potential to be meaningful, but is already in danger of being undermined by behind the scenes directives… yes, David Nicholson’s at it again... a leaflet that some feel is nothing more than crude propaganda… and an ongoing failure to actually listen. 


Listening does not mean talking more slowly. Listening does not mean using smaller words or bigger font. Listening does not mean converting a parliamentary statement from July 2010 into a glossy leaflet, resplendent with infographics, in April 2011. And listening absolutely does not mean pausing and then continuing regardless.

Oh, and if I'm wrong (it happens..... a lot), then tell me how you are listening. Show me what you are doing in response to what you're hearing. Because I'm hearing a lot, and it's not what I'd call universally supportive and positive. This fantastic piece from Paul Corrigan's invariably excellent blog is inspired - basically casting Larry Labour (who can be over controlling and bossy, and likes a bit of Tina Targets action on the side) as the NHS' childhood sweetheart, and Tony Tory as the NHS' childhood bully, now saying that he's seen the error of his ways, has totally changed, and has fallen in love with the NHS. But what is the basis of this new found love? Conceptual only? And if Tony Tory loves the NHS so much, why is he wanting her to change so much?

As for the two pronged approach of vilifying bureaucrats and relying upon the frequent use of dodgy facts, I can only make a very simple plea. Stop doing it. Now.

The former is completely unfair to the thousands of committed individuals who work incredibly hard, no matter what the Government of the day is, and despite the axe of redundancy or the spectre of job insecurity hanging over or around them. And the latter is an affront to our intelligence and a very dubious way to conduct any kind of business, let alone business that affects every single person living in England.


Goodnight meaningful political engagement and appropriate use of evidence to support claims, wherever you are


Chris
Wordle: Liberating the NHS