Archive for June, 2007
What now for schools?
Posted by David Conway in Education on 29/06/2007
As Blair prepared his goodbyes this week, we’ve been looking at his record in schools. Our verdict? Improved results denote a decline in standards. Have a look at the full report which examines the ways in which results have been boosted, here.
The Siddiqui Report: The Government Picks Another Winner!
Posted by Nick Cowen in Social Cohesion on 26/06/2007
Being desperate to stop the radicalisation of British-born Muslims, the government turned for expert advice on how best they may be taught about Islam so that they would learn that only moderate versions of their religion were, if not authentic, then at least palatable.
continued on the Centre for Social Cohesion blog.
18-week target looks unobtainable
Posted by James Gubb in Health on 22/06/2007
A new online briefing released today by Civitas looks in detail at statistics relating to government performance on waiting times, in particular those recently released on the 18-week referral to treatment target. It argues that a number of statistics hidden in the data suggest the NHS has a massive, and probably insurmountable, challenge to meet the 18-week RTT target by 2008 without compromising patient care. In particular that:
- A substantial number of patients are still waiting significantly longer than 18 weeks;
36% are waiting beyond 26 weeks and 12% are waiting beyond a year.
- There are real variations in the time waited by patients both geographically and across medical specialities. For example, just 25% of orthopaedic patients are seen within 18 weeks, compared with 79% of those receiving thoracic medicine; and just 33% of patients in the South East Coast SHA are treated within the target compared with 60% in the East Midlands SHA. It will be incredibly difficult for those with low proportions of patients treated within the target to turn this around in little over a year.
-The NHS remains some way off meeting the goal that patients receive all diagnostics within 13 weeks of their first outpatient appointment, which will have to be considerably less if the 18-week pathway is to be met. 109,694 people were still waiting beyond 13 weeks as of March 2007.
Moreover, despite the improvements in cutting waiting times for inpatient and outpatient appointments, median waiting times have actually increased and 700,000 people are still on waiting lists for inpatient treatment with over 950,000 waiting for an outpatient appointment.
And NHS patients are still waiting much longer than those in other health systems. According to surveys conducted in 2005 and 2006 by the Commonwealth Fund merely 6% of primary care physicians in the UK thought their patients ‘rarely or never experience long waiting times for diagnostic tests’, compared with 76% in Germany; and 41% of respondents in the UK reported waiting longer than 4 months for elective surgery, compared with just 6% in Germany and 8% in the US.
Not quite far enough Mr Cameron
Posted by James Gubb in Health on 21/06/2007
There are aspects of the new Conservative White Paper on health to applaud, but they are, by and large, pretty much restricted to the supply-side. That advocated for commissioning is quite a different matter.
The Real Battle of Ideas
Posted by Nick Cowen in Religion on 19/06/2007
“Unfortunately, the U.S.A., Britain, the alliance, our government… are driven… by the obsession to eliminate the Muslims from the surface of the earth. Whether my colleagues, companions and Muslim brothers die today or tonight, every drop of blood will invigorate the Muslim movement.”
So reportedly said the leader of the “British brigade” in explanation of why “his team” stands ready to carry out suicide attacks in Great Britain. He reportedly did so in a valedictory speech delivered at a graduation ceremony for future suicide-bombers held ten days ago at a training camp somewhere inside Afghanistan near the Pakistan border.
Continued on the Centre for Social Cohesion blog.
Testing
Posted by David Conway in Education on 15/06/2007
Yet more trials for testing and tests this week. The General Teaching Council has called for the standard assessment tests (Sats) taken by pupils at ages 7, 11 and 14 years old, to be scrapped. The teaching standards watchdog argues that the tests are doing nothing for standards, simply stressing out pupils and teachers.