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The NHS and our empty pockets

Crash | 30.10.2004 00:44

Lies, Damned Lies, and Statistics - the NHS out of control on public spending?

A couple of weeks ago, Computer Weekly magazine investigated the cost of the NHS's new IT programme. Hardly the kind of story that normally stokes the debates on Indymedia's newswire. And indeed it didn't - not a single story was posted on the subject.
Yet the corporate media showed only a little more interest - when subsequently it was confirmed that the Department of Health were indeed expecting a bill of £35-£40 billion.
And you thought Windows XP was a rip off? This sounds like serious cash for a bit of software, and indeed it is. Taking the lower estimate of £35 billion over the next ten years makes £3.5 billion a year. Or £10 million a day. Perhaps you prefer to be billed £400 grand an hour (maybe a hundred quid a second makes it easier to bear).
Now I know some high-flyers in IT, such as senior project managers, and they are charged out at around £200 per hour. So, doing our sums, we're talking about roughly 2,000 senior IT managers working continuously 24 hours a day, 365 days a year for ten years.

Sound like a dodgy deal for a few DOS batch files? It probably is. Just like the West Coast mainline upgrade, which might end up costing £8 billion. But is £40 billion going missing one of those things we furrow our collective brows over, or one of the greatest uninvestigated public spending scandals in history?

Crash

Comments

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er univestigated obviously

30.10.2004 06:22

er can we investigate, i think i know whos got the contract i will dig it out or something.. well done for posting this

roderick


silly ranting

31.10.2004 10:22

This is just more lefty daft polemic in my view. I work in the nhs and problems such as these stem from a culture of ignorance and blame amongst senior nhs managers. Dont forget the nhs regularly gets charged 100 per hour for agency nurses.... are they all bad people too? If these computer professionals were left to work unimpeded by the 'managers' within the health serivce I believe the job would have been better done. Your comments on the nature of the work also betray a commendable enthusiam but a total lack of research or reflection, well this is indymedia!

zaskar


a big white taxi driver writes...

31.10.2004 11:23

Crash, I like your post (and other stuff with your name on this site) but it's a bit misleading to describe the NHS IT project as 'a few DOS batch files'.

True, staff, patients and taxpayers stand to be fucked over by private contractors as usual but the project is a bit more than
@echo Laughing All The Way To The Bank Ha HA HA

It's gonna involve lots of hardware, cables, installation work, staff training and stuff. It's also bound to run years late, go wildly over intended cost and be riddled with bugs.

At the moment the NHS has it's IT done locally, by hospital, Trust, or even department so that next-door wards can have Windoze and Apple Mac OS X respectively. Would love to hear of NHS sites making successful use of open source though - that would be 2 fingers to Bill Gate$ getting fat on NHS money.

nee-naa