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Government to bribe GPs

Gulliver | 24.01.2006 09:31 | Health

I had always understood that when my GP was making an assessment of any illness I presented, he would base his judgement on his medical skills and experience. Under new government proposals this may no longer be the case.

Work and Pensions Secretary John Hutton has confirmed that under new proposals to save money, GPs may be offered cash incentives to encourage patients on Incapacity Benefit back to work. This is an outrageous idea. No matter how professional a GP attempts to be one cannot avoid the fear that decisions will be influenced by such financial incentives, if only subconsciously, in a cash-strapped GP’s surgery.

I await with little optimism a balancing proposal that accountants will be provided with cash incentives to discourage high earners and ‘captains of industry’ from using tax avoidance techniques to avoid paying moneys, which could help those in need.

Gulliver

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Hear hear

24.01.2006 11:31

For too long governments have been trying to blame "lazy" or "uncooperative" workers for the countries woes, yet they continue to allow the rich to persuede them to lower taxes on the upper echelons of society and give "incentives" (huge piles of cash) to corporations, in some bizzare 'trickle-down theory'.
Something must be done, where are the days of national general strikes - every industry shutting down and only starting again when the people saw proper change.

iconoclast


More information

24.01.2006 16:36

Previous Indymedia articles on Welfare Reform:

Welfare Reform to be extremely severe
 http://www.indymedia.org.uk/en/2006/01/331755.html

Sick and disabled targeted in benefit reforms
 http://www.indymedia.org.uk/en/regions/sheffield/2005/12/330617.html

Meeting on incapacity benefit reform
 http://www.indymedia.org.uk/en/2005/11/328334.html

More relating the 'New Deal for welfare: empowering people to work' can be found here:

The press statement from the Department for Work and Pensions:
 http://www.gnn.gov.uk/Content/Detail.asp?ReleaseID=185191&NewsAreaID=2
 http://www.dwp.gov.uk/mediacentre/pressreleases/2006/jan/fmc068-240106.asp

Download the documents:
 http://www.gnn.gov.uk/imagelibrary/downloadMedia.asp?MediaDetailsID=144791

Department for Work and Pensions:
 http://www.dwp.gov.uk/

Press Releases on Welfare Reform:
2005:  http://www.dwp.gov.uk/mediacentre/pressreleases/2005/welfare-reform/
2006:  http://www.dwp.gov.uk/mediacentre/pressreleases/2006/welfare-reform/

Speech by John Hutton on 16th January 2006:
The Active Welfare State: Matching Rights with Responsibilities:
 http://www.dwp.gov.uk/aboutus/2006/16_01_06.asp

Wikipedia on the Welfare State:
 http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Welfare_state

Charles


general practitioners face fundamental conflict of interest

24.01.2006 21:07

Of course there are people on incapacity benefit who could do some work, particularly former manual workers if they could be retrained. But tackling the perverse incentives in the current scheme by cutting benefits will doubtless lead to injustices and hardship. Also, the quality of "training" offered on compulsory government schemes is questionable to say the least.

It would be far better to scrap all the personal tax allowance, benefits, student loans, and pensions and give every citizen a guaranteed income without humiliation or investigation.

Douglas Carnall
mail e-mail: dougie@navarino.org.uk
- Homepage: http://navarino.org.uk:8080/blog


Back into what work ?

27.01.2006 02:18

Very few people live on benefits of any kind through choice. With out creating jobs, fewer folk on the sick just means more folk on the bru, not much of a saving. I always saw the encouraged migration to the sick as NuLab tacitally massaging the dole figures. I'm as smug a doley as you'll meet and I wouldn't sign on the sick because it could interfere with future employment, but I know folk on the sick simply because you get less hassle from the dole and a pittance more money and importantly they have no realistic expectation of future employment to worry about. Backache, depression, whatever is easy to fake. I even know one antisocial control freak who convinced a doctor that his obvious personality flaws amount to a debilitating obsessive compulsive disorder - and good luck to him. This money-saving scheme is likely to cost more than it saves the tax payer unless they save on benefits when genuinely sick folk start killing themselves for the hassle they get.

The New Deal is another expensive joke - it costs the tax-payer £6000 per inmate and the training given is not exactly £6000's worth, not even £60's worth, it's just day prison for poor people and a gravy train for the trainers. I met a couple of folk on the New Deal who wanted to sign up for Iraq, but couldn't because they had previously been on the sick for depression, lucky idiots ('and I wasn't even depressed, I was just after sleeping tablets').

In the same week the real subsidy junkies, the defence companies such as Carlyle group walk off with hundreds of millions of pounds of tax-payers money. Now that is sick.

Danny