Mark Britnell

Mark Britnell

Mark Britnell (born 1966) is (since October 2009) a partner and Head of Healthcare, Europe & UK for advisory firm KPMG. He was previously Director-General for Commissioning and System Management for the National Health Service (NHS) of England (July 2007 - September 2009).

Contents

Career

Britnell is a graduate of the University of Warwick; during his time there he was a Trotskyist activist in the Labour Club.[1] He subsequently joined the fast-track Management Training Scheme for the NHS and received his postgraduate education at Warwick University Business School.

His career has included various management posts in the NHS and a spell with the Australian health service, a year in the civil service fast stream which was sponsored by the Australian College of Health Service Executives to work in Melbourne and Sydney before being seconded to the NHSE in 1992. Britnell joined St Mary’s Hospital in London as a General Manager before being appointed as a Director at Central Middlesex Hospital (now part of North West London Hospitals NHS Trust) in 1995. In 1995, Mark became the Project Director for Ambulatory Care and Diagnostic (ACAD) PFI scheme - the first of its kind in the United Kingdom.[2]

From 2000 - 2006, he was chief executive at University Hospital Birmingham NHS Foundation Trust. In 2006 he was appointed as chief executive of the South Central Strategic Health Authority. He was Director-General for Commissioning and System Management for the National Health Service (NHS) of England (July 2007 - September 2009).[3] In March 2006, after Nigel Crisp (his mentor[4]) resigned as NHS Chief Executive, Britnell was tipped as a likely contender for the post. However, he did not apply for the job. In 2009 he left the NHS to join KPMG.[5]

Policy Advisor

Britnell plays an active part in the Modernisation Agenda and sat on the Professions Modernisation Action Team which helped produce the NHS Plan. He currently sits on the Capital and Capacity Taskforce for the NHS Plan. He has also represented the Department of Health on the study/development tour of China and plays a leading part in the European Union sponsored development and exchange program with Academic Clinical Centres in South Africa. In May 2011, it was reported that he had been invited to join a panel of health experts to advise Number 10 on health policy and reform in general, but not the reforms in the Health and Social Care Bill 2011.[6]

The previous year, when discussing the reforms to a healthcare industry conference, he is quoted as stating “In future, The NHS will be a state insurance provider not a state deliverer”, and that “The NHS will be shown no mercy and the best time to take advantage of this will be in the next couple of years.”[7][8]. KPMG issued a press statement on behalf of Britnell on 16 May 2011 stating “The article in The Observer [15 May] attributes quotes to me that do not properly reflect discussions held at a private conference last October. Nor was I given the opportunity to respond ahead of publication. I worked in the NHS for twenty years and now work alongside it. I have always been a passionate advocate of the NHS and believe that it has a great future. Like many other countries throughout the world, the pressure facing healthcare funding and provision are enormous. If the NHS is to change and modernize the public, private and voluntary sectors will all need to play their part.”

The Health Service Journal website published a longer statement from Britnell on 17 May, prompted by the article in The Observer. In it Britnell explained his perspective on the reform of the NHS. Among wide ranging remarks he stated that “[o]f course, the vast majority of care - quite rightly in the UK context - will always be provided by public sector organisations (currently, about 95% of it) and will be paid out of taxation” and “[t]he issue of competition, which now seems to be conflated with privatisation, is unhelpful and misleading and, at best, only a small part of reform. Competition can exist without privatisation and the NHS can maintain its historic role in funding care while dealing with a richer variety of providers - public sector, social enterprise and private organisations.” [9]


References

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