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Tag: News
Trump: A Family History

You are probably by now already hideously aware of The Great American Mistake.
Within a short space of time, President Donald Trump has made an executive order to reopen the Keystone Dakota oil pipeline, damning a large community of Native Americans to unsafe water supplies.
He has also banned people from “Muslim majority countries” entering the USA, in the name of ending terrorism. This has closed America’s doors to the tired, poor and huddled masses left without homes and without hope, trapped in chaos driven by war.
On the 17th January 2017, I interviewed the documentary filmmaker Paul Berczeller, who has made a documentary for Channel 4 about the origins of Donald Trump, going back to his grandfather who emigrated from Germany and ran brothels for gold miners in the Old West.
I talked to him about what had to happen to create a Donald Trump, and to get his perspective on the reality of a Trump presidency.
Paul’s film ‘Meet the Trumps’ is available to watch on All4 here.
This interview was initially recorded for iRadio Coventry, and aired on 17/01/2017.
Jeremy Hunt is delusional- his response to the junior doctor strike action ballot proves it
Junior doctors have just voted overwhelmingly in support of strike action in response to the new Department of Health contract. 98% have advocated for proper strike action, and 99% have said they would support everything up to it. And yet, in an interview with BBC News, Jeremy Hunt still places the blame firmly on a militant BMA being unwilling to negotiate over terms:
This is the result of a very regrettable campaign of misinformation by the BMA over the Summer that’s tried to scare doctors about these proposals, suggesting that they’re going to have big pay cuts. I would urge every doctor before they participate in this strike to actually look at the government’s offer: we are bringing down weekend rates in order to improve cover at weekends, but we’re increasing basic pay by around 11%.
Source: BBC News
In a web worthy of the most hardened conspiracy theorist, the Right Honourable MP has positioned himself as the spider, trying to hold the strands together against the onslaught of brainwashed BMA flies flying towards it. “Don’t worry, I won’t suck the life out of the health service,” he seems to say, “I won’t be cutting your pay, I will just be readjusting how it is delivered into a format that I find preferable. Oh, the professionals don’t agree? They’ve found that none of what I am saying adds up? They must be out to get me.”
Jeremy Hunt has also rejected any notion of conciliatory talks through the Advisory, Conciliation and Arbitration Service (ACAS), saying that his ‘door has been open for talks since June, and the BMA have refused to engage at any stage with talks’. He tweeted recently that any pre-conditions that the BMA are referring to are completely fabricated, even having the gall to post a link to the letters to the Junior Doctor’s Committee (JDC) Chair in which the preconditions are described.
Read my letter to BMA confirming there aren’t & never have been preconditions to #juniorcontract negotiations: https://t.co/XDNwK23BRQ
— Jeremy Hunt (@Jeremy_Hunt) November 17, 2015
Back on the 4th November, the JDC Chair Dr Johann Malawana released a statement saying that:
To get back around the negotiating table we have repeatedly called on the government to remove the threat of imposition and provide us with concrete assurances on a safe and fair contract. Today’s announcement falls short on both counts as, once again, the headlines do not match up to reality.
Crucially, the proposals fail to deliver safeguards with real teeth to protect safe working patterns and, with it, patient and doctor safety. Furthermore, the proposals on pay, not for the first time, appear to be misleading. The increase in basic pay would be offset by changes to pay for unsocial hours – devaluing the vital work junior doctors do at evenings and weekends. While, in the short-term, existing junior doctors may have their pay protected, protections will only exist for a limited time.
Source: BMA
So, the JDC was willing to negotiate.
So, there were preconditions to the contract negotiations, including an imposition of the terms regarding pay, which I might again emphasise are laid out in the letters Mr Hunt posted online.
So, despite Mr Hunt’s insistences, there would be substantial effects on doctor’s pay.
So, it’s not all about pay in the first place, there are genuine concerns about the risks placed on patient safety by the new contract.
And he wonders why doctors have exactly zero trust in him?

I would prefer to give him the benefit of the doubt on this one. All of the evidence points towards a campaign of misinformation, not on the part of the JDC, but rather orchestrated by Jeremy Hunt and the Department of Health. This would all seem to indicate he is being wilfully dishonest; however, I suggest another option.
He genuinely believes everything he is saying, and he genuinely believes that the backlash given to him at every turn over his policies from people in the know is simply because he is poor old Jeremy Hunt, just trying to make the world better. In simpler terms, he is delusional, to the point where it is interfering with his job. He is caught up in the collective Tory delusion that by implementing private sector business practice everywhere, the country can be saved- even when it is demonstrably not working, it is just an element of militant doctors or left-wing malcontents trying to stir up trouble.
I prefer to believe this, because I’d rather he was delusional and incompetent, a man with fingers in his ears, than to think for a second any of this was done intentionally. Either way, it is completely and utterly apparent that he is not fit for office- just remember that the petition to call a a vote of no confidence in Mr Hunt has, at current, over 225,000 signatures, more than twice the 100,000 for a debate to be held (which consisted of debating the ‘underlying issue in the petition which was started’, i.e. the contract conditions of NHS staff).
In response to Jeremy Hunt rejecting talks through ACAS, the BMA have released the following statement:
It is clear that trust has broken down between junior doctors and the government, which is why we are offering conciliatory talks via ACAS. If it is true that Jeremy Hunt has refused our offer, all he is doing is entrenching himself even further.
This is not just one or two junior doctors who believe that his proposals are unsafe for patients and unfair for doctors. The fact that today’s ballot result is near unanimous should be a wake-up call for the government. Instead of continuing to ignore the views of tens of thousands of junior doctors who, in the health secretary’s own words, are the backbone of the NHS, he should, if he really wants to avoid industrial action, accept the BMA’s offer of conciliatory talks.
Source: BMA
One can only hope that even the upper echelons of the Tory party must eventually take note of the catastrophic failures in the Department of Health, and reshuffle accordingly.
But it’s entirely possible that they are all delusional too.
Pharmacy2U caught and fined £130,000 for selling patient information without consent
We all get advertising calls. Our phone numbers are constantly being sold off to marketing agencies, leading to those persistent calls asking about our accidents and PPI claims which don’t seem to stop, even when we follow the prompt to “press 9 to opt out”. They tend to remain in the part of our lives marked annoyance, rather than being seen as anything more malign- most of these companies don’t even know the names of the people they are calling, only their numbers. However, recent developments suggest that the line may be getting blurred.
On the 20th October, the Information Commissioner’s Office concluded an investigation into Pharmacy2U, an NHS-approved prescription-delivery service that has now been fined £130,000 after it was found that they had been selling patient details to advertising agencies. The incident was originally uncovered by a Daily Mail investigation. Pharmacy2U is registered with both the General Pharmaceutical Council and the Care Quality Commission. The company delivers repeat prescriptions to patients who might be unable to collect the drugs in person.

On their databases, by necessity, they have a lot of private information about the patients they supply, including names, ages, genders, home addresses, contact details and (and here’s the part where you should feel a chill crawling up your spine) their prescriptions, from which one could reasonably infer what maladies they are suffering from. I should make it clear, that I have found no reason to believe that specific medical details were given out as a part of these information packages to the marketing agencies, however according to the ICO report, likely conditions were advertised, and ‘selections were available based on age, sex and how recently the customer had used the service.’
In the United Kingdom, there are laws against the marketing of the public’s private information without their consent. The Data Protection Act of 1998, along with the Privacy and Electronic Communications Regulations, 2003, make it so that for a company to sell information about one of their users/customers/clients/etc., they must first have their consent. The 2003 regulations made it so that positive consent was required online, which translates to an oft-overlooked tick box in which you are signing over to the company the ability to do share your details with their “carefully selected marketing agencies”.
Bear in mind that one of Pharmacy2U’s carefully selected marketing agencies (Health Marketing Ltd.) was under investigation by the Advertising Standards Agency for printing misleading information about Glucosamine supplements. The ICO have noted that, due to there being no publicly available information about this investigation at the time, Pharmacy2U were most likely unaware of this particular agency’s disrepute.
This does not excuse them, not by an absolute mile- despite their protests otherwise, the act of a trusted and reputable company selling patient information to any kind of marketing company, especially when many of the patients due to their age may not have been internet-literate enough to notice those infernal tick boxes, is abhorrent and highly cynical.
An apology and a £130,000 fine seem like water balloons against a well-armoured tank. Patient details were sold in lots of 1,000 for £130 apiece (13p per data set). Around 21,500 patient’s details were sold, although 100,000 data sets were advertised. The fine seems to be in direct relation to the total amount of revenue that could have been made from the sales of this data. Surely then, this is not a fair sentence?

Source: Wikipedia
If a thief were to steal a locket of immense emotional importance to its rightful owner, then the public would be outraged if when the thief was caught he was asked only to return the item and have done with it. The details released were as valuable to Pharmacy2U’s clients as to the hypothetical victim’s jewellery above: they constituted a significant part of their identities, leaving them open to specific appeals made using potentially very sensitive information.
The BMA have made a statement much to this effect. They note that the report raises ‘serious concerns’ about Pharmacy2U’s ability to handle data in a proper and secure manner. They go on to say:
Although the BMA welcomes the information from the ICO investigation, we are pushing for custodial penalties for those who wilfully or recklessly abuse personal data. In our view, the current financial penalties do not offer enough of a deterrent.
Source: BMA
The EMIS Group, a minority shareholder in Pharmacy2U, have made it clear that they were unaware of the company’s activities. They also confirm that Pharmacy2U is ‘no longer [selling] customer data and moving to a proactive consent model for its own marketing’ and that they did not contravene the DPA deliberately, nor were they properly informed at the time of their decision that some of the marketing companies may have been ‘involved in fraudulent activity’.
Corrections: I have been informed by Pharmacy2U’s PR representatives that the number quoted for data leaks was wrong; it is in fact 21,500 data sets that were released, not 100,000. I originally misread this figure from the BBC News website, although did not check closer as it referred to the total amount of data advertised.
I would also like to make it clear that EMIS Group is a minority shareholder in Pharmacy2U, Pharmacy2U is not a subsidiary of EMIS.
Additions: In reviewing the ICO’s report after receiving this information, I have also found that the data card used to advertise the data ‘included an age breakdown and a list of health conditions that customers were likely to suffer from’, which while not specifying which customer had which condition, but they were advertised with such information as ‘age, sex and how recently the customer had used the service’. This is an important point, as I had previously been unaware that any medical information at all was presented during the sales.
Manifesto
I adapted the name of this blog, “Cut For Stone”, from a line of the original Hippocratic oath made between the 5th and 3rd century BCE. It was devised by the physician Hippocrates for medical students under his tuition, as a means of ensuring potential physicians maintained an ethical manner and upheld their obligations. An abridged translation of the original line is as follows:
I will not cut persons labouring under the stone, but will leave this to be done by the [surgeons]
Source: Encyclopaedia Britannica (http://www.britannica.com/topic/Hippocratic-oath)
The stone in reference is likely to be kidney stones or something similar. It is well known that surgery is a somewhat precise and, in unskilled hands, dangerous art; this part of the oath appears to encourage a humility in these early doctors. “If you do not know how,” Hippocrates seems to say, “then ask someone who does to help”. This, to me, is a good central stone by which to base this blog.

Again and again, we have seen officials blindly altering legislation without any heed to the words of experts speaking against it- as I write this, here in the UK, the Department of Work and Pensions is being looked into for their treatment of the disabled, and the Tory cabinet are dismissive that anything is wrong. Jeremy Hunt MP, in his tenure as the Secretary of State for Health, has faced widespread staff shortages and NHS budget deficits of potentially over £2.5 billion leading to a difficulty to maintain a proper quality of care. Recently, he made an announcement to insinuate that it was not he, but the BMA that was misleading junior doctors who had worked out that they were heading towards a substantial pay decrease.
I fully believe that these people are working with what they consider the country’s best interests at heart. Unfortunately, in their eagerness to sell the UK off to the private sector piece by piece, they have failed to consider fully the impact of their measures in the world of reality, not ideology. Using disreputable companies like ATOS to decide whether or not those in need are truly needy enough, and cutting tax credits away as if they were so much unneeded fat has created the circumstances which have led to widespread anguish, financial difficulties and in some cases, even death.

It could all have been avoided; it is currently almost being ignored- hidden, if you consider the changing of the definition of child poverty by Iain Duncan Smith as any indication. If only these people, in their pursuit of the “stone” in our society, had considered asking first where the stone was located, and exactly how one breaches a kidney like the NHS without harming it. Proper, evidence-based policies, taken fully into consideration and not rejected with derision, might have led to true success.
I believe the way to incite change is through transparency. Transparency puts pressure on those in power by laying bare their actions, that they may be judged by a jury larger than themselves. That is the purpose of this blog.
This post will in future take the function of a manifesto. I intend to write this blog with the following directives in mind:
- This blog will be for the purposes of news and analysis of current events within the UK.
- The NHS is one of our most treasured assets, and it must be protected for the future prosperity of our country.
- My writing will be clear, informed and current.
- I write in order to aid transparency in the opaque parts of the public and political spheres.
- I will try to the best of my abilities to put the needs of those in need first.
- It is possible to be wrong, and sometimes necessary in the search of improvement.
- I am opposed to the privatisation of public assets where it is demonstrated to put them at risk and/or to have a negative effect on the country.
Thank you for reading. First updates will be along as soon as possible.

