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Authors' reply

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  02 January 2018

John Cox
Affiliation:
Keele University, UK, email: john1.cox@virgin.net
Alison Gray
Affiliation:
2gether NHS Foundation Trust, Hereford, UK
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Abstract

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Creative Commons
Creative Common License - CCCreative Common License - BY
This is an open-access article published by the Royal College of Psychiatrists and distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
Copyright
Copyright © Royal College of Psychiatrists, 2015

We welcome the opportunity to reply to Professor Poole’s stimulating and challenging commentary on our editorial which, even if misunderstood, has clearly succeeded in alerting the readership to the pressing managerial and moral challenges for the NHS in the aftermath of the Francis report.

The College, in its 6-month update of its report, has a further chance to unravel the complex contributing circumstances in Mid Staffordshire, and to consider not confining its recommendations to mental health services alone. The failure to put patients first and the neglect of basic quality of care standards could be replicated elsewhere. Reference Dewhurst, Jones and Wilson1 The task is not confined to applied scientists, but involves values as well as the personal ethics of members. Therefore, in appearing to belittle the contribution of moral philosophers, comparative religion experts and even patient groups to the consideration of the roots of compassion and to the conceptual underpinning of patient-centred care, Prof. Poole is out of kilter with much local and international work in this field. Reference Miles and Mezzich2

We would wish also to counter his suspicion that the source of our dissatisfaction with OP92 was linked to a secret Christian plot to impose our religious values on others of a different faith or none. That was far from our intent – as a detailed, unblinkered reading of the editorial would confirm. Moreover, our earlier disclosures of interest were as cited, but have been repeated without first checking neither their current accuracy, nor the precise context in which those declarations were appropriate. For the interest of readers, J.C. remains a lay member of a Methodist Church in Cheltenham, A.G. is now an associate priest in the Church of England, and the Centre for the study of Faith, Science and Values at the University of Gloucestershire closed last year.

Rex Haigh, on the other hand, is correct to have identified our implicit awareness that the values of the therapeutic community, the understandings of the need for healthy environments respectful of the person – and the grasp of group processes – have each conditioned our search for solutions to the current NHS impasse. The excellent work undertaken by the College’s Centre for Quality Improvement (CCQI) was referred to in our editorial and in the College response. It is much to be hoped that the CCQI will increasingly be more integrated with the other College structures, so that its impact on routine medical work in acute hospital care (such as intensive care, a gastrointestinal cancer service or a primary care community unit) can be facilitated. The lack of uptake of the CCQI’s projects in the NHS (other than the Quality Network for Perinatal Mental Health Services, which is conspicuously successful) Reference Solomon and Thomson3 is, in the context of the Francis recommendations, a cause for much concern and may be symptomatic of the current malaise.

We thank both correspondents for prolonging this timely and important debate. We conclude by declaring an interest in the hope that the College, in tandem with other national organisations, will seek for a majority opinion about the nature of these key structural issues in the NHS – including the fitness for purpose of the competitive business model – and also facilitate a greater understanding of the conceptual (biological, philosophical, ethical, humanistic and religious) underpinning of the nature of health, the process of healing and the primacy of the person.

References

1 Dewhurst, NG, Jones, MC, Wilson, JA. Time to refocus the NHS on quality and dignity of patient care: RCPE response to Mid Staffordshire. J R Coll Physicians Edinb 2013; 43; 36.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
2 Miles, A, Mezzich, JK. Person-centered medicine: advancing methods, promoting implementation. Int J Pers Centered Med 2011; 3: 423–5.Google Scholar
3 Solomon, S, Thomson, P. The Quality Network for Perinatal Mental health Services. College Centre for Quality Improvement, 2010.Google Scholar
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