NHS ordered to end care bias against men
The equality watchdog has ordered the National Health Service (NHS) to take urgent action to end it's anti male discrimination in healthcare.
The Equality and Human Rights Commission (EHRC), headed by Trevor Phillips, has written to strategic health authorities warning them to ensure that doctors and hospitals in their areas give equal priority to men and women.
The commission has legal powers to issue compliance orders to NHS trusts that persistently fail to provide equal care for men.
While the commission does not cite specific examples of discrimination, it details evidence of poorer male health. Other groups have pointed to male-unfriendly surgery opening hours.
Men are twice as likely as women to die from the 10 most common cancers that affect both sexes and, typically, develop heart disease 10 years earlier than women. Men under the age of 45 visit their GP only half as often as women and are less likely to have dental check-ups.
On average, men die five years younger than women and 16% of men die while still of working age compared with 6% of women. Men are also three times more likely to commit suicide than women.
A new law, the gender equality duty, which came into force in April 2007, obliges all public services to ensure they care for both sexes equally. In March, Phil McCarvill, head of public service duties at the EHRC, sent warning letters to strategic health authorities, the bodies which manage local NHS trusts.
McCarvill said: “We are writing to you specifically regarding the gender equality duty in response to particular concerns raised with us by the Men’s Health Forum and the action we want you to take in response to this. We will view the failure to take any action as a result of this letter as a breach of your legal responsibilities in this area.”
Research carried out by the forum found that men were unhappy with the service provided by their local GP surgeries. The forum points out that since men are twice as likely as women to work full-time and three times as likely to work overtime, it is more difficult for them to see doctors during conventional opening hours.
Other experts have pointed to the fact that, while there is a national screening programme for breast cancer, there is no equivalent yet for men for prostate cancer, although it claims a similar number of lives. Women are also screened for cervical cancer.
Peter Baker, chief executive of the Men’s Health Forum, said: “The GP model doesn’t work particularly well for men, particularly young men aged between 16 and 45 who GPs tend not to see unless there is something very seriously wrong with them. There is discrimination because these services are being underused by the group with the greatest need.”
The forum also suggests trusts offer health checks in venues frequented by men, such as work-places or sports clubs.
The Commons health select committee inquiry into health inequality will next month hear evidence that men are being discriminated against in the NHS.
From:
http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/life_and_style/health/article3999217.ece
Health Direct points out that labour's centralist politically correct doesn't just extend to pro women bias. They also channel extra funds into labour voting areas.
On August 07, 2006 Health Direct posted: Rural areas lose out to cities over health spending postcode lottery
Money needed for patients in rural England is being diverted to inner-city areas where it is not even being spent, experts say. Researchers at Cambridge University Medical School say the 29 primary care trusts (PCTs) most in surplus in 2004-5 were virtually all in inner-city areas.
In comparison, the 29 most in-debt PCTs were in rural areas, which received on average £205 less per head of population.
The Equality and Human Rights Commission (EHRC), headed by Trevor Phillips, has written to strategic health authorities warning them to ensure that doctors and hospitals in their areas give equal priority to men and women.
The commission has legal powers to issue compliance orders to NHS trusts that persistently fail to provide equal care for men.
While the commission does not cite specific examples of discrimination, it details evidence of poorer male health. Other groups have pointed to male-unfriendly surgery opening hours.
Men are twice as likely as women to die from the 10 most common cancers that affect both sexes and, typically, develop heart disease 10 years earlier than women. Men under the age of 45 visit their GP only half as often as women and are less likely to have dental check-ups.
On average, men die five years younger than women and 16% of men die while still of working age compared with 6% of women. Men are also three times more likely to commit suicide than women.
A new law, the gender equality duty, which came into force in April 2007, obliges all public services to ensure they care for both sexes equally. In March, Phil McCarvill, head of public service duties at the EHRC, sent warning letters to strategic health authorities, the bodies which manage local NHS trusts.
McCarvill said: “We are writing to you specifically regarding the gender equality duty in response to particular concerns raised with us by the Men’s Health Forum and the action we want you to take in response to this. We will view the failure to take any action as a result of this letter as a breach of your legal responsibilities in this area.”
Research carried out by the forum found that men were unhappy with the service provided by their local GP surgeries. The forum points out that since men are twice as likely as women to work full-time and three times as likely to work overtime, it is more difficult for them to see doctors during conventional opening hours.
Other experts have pointed to the fact that, while there is a national screening programme for breast cancer, there is no equivalent yet for men for prostate cancer, although it claims a similar number of lives. Women are also screened for cervical cancer.
Peter Baker, chief executive of the Men’s Health Forum, said: “The GP model doesn’t work particularly well for men, particularly young men aged between 16 and 45 who GPs tend not to see unless there is something very seriously wrong with them. There is discrimination because these services are being underused by the group with the greatest need.”
The forum also suggests trusts offer health checks in venues frequented by men, such as work-places or sports clubs.
The Commons health select committee inquiry into health inequality will next month hear evidence that men are being discriminated against in the NHS.
From:
http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/life_and_style/health/article3999217.ece
Health Direct points out that labour's centralist politically correct doesn't just extend to pro women bias. They also channel extra funds into labour voting areas.
On August 07, 2006 Health Direct posted: Rural areas lose out to cities over health spending postcode lottery
Money needed for patients in rural England is being diverted to inner-city areas where it is not even being spent, experts say. Researchers at Cambridge University Medical School say the 29 primary care trusts (PCTs) most in surplus in 2004-5 were virtually all in inner-city areas.
In comparison, the 29 most in-debt PCTs were in rural areas, which received on average £205 less per head of population.
Labels: Commons-Health-Committee, NHS deaths, politically correct, postcode lottery, preventable crisis

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