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David Cameron eyes NHS-life sciences partnership David Cameron eyes NHS-life sciences partnership
(40 minutes later)
  
The NHS should be "opened up" to private healthcare firms under plans which include sharing anonymous patient data, David Cameron is due to announce.The NHS should be "opened up" to private healthcare firms under plans which include sharing anonymous patient data, David Cameron is due to announce.
He is expected to say that the "end-game" for the health service is to drive innovation and growth by working "hand-in-glove" with industry.He is expected to say that the "end-game" for the health service is to drive innovation and growth by working "hand-in-glove" with industry.
The PM wants to give patients faster access to new treatments and make the life sciences sector a world leader.The PM wants to give patients faster access to new treatments and make the life sciences sector a world leader.
But critics say commercial interests are being put ahead of patient privacy.But critics say commercial interests are being put ahead of patient privacy.
In a keynote speech in London on Monday, Mr Cameron is expected to say the coalition's key strategy is to open up the NHS to new ideas. Ministers believe Britain can become a world leader in the field of life sciences - an industry already worth £50bn a year and employing 160,000 people - because of the expertise within the NHS and its strong university-based research.
In a speech in London on Monday, Mr Cameron is expected to say the coalition's key strategy is to open up the NHS in England to new ideas.
'Huge magnet''Huge magnet'
"The end-game is for the NHS to be working hand-in-glove with industry as the fastest adopter of new ideas in the world," he is due to say."The end-game is for the NHS to be working hand-in-glove with industry as the fastest adopter of new ideas in the world," he is due to say.
That would act as a "huge magnet to pull new innovations through, right along the food-chain - from the labs, to the boardrooms, to the hospital bed", he will add.That would act as a "huge magnet to pull new innovations through, right along the food-chain - from the labs, to the boardrooms, to the hospital bed", he will add.
Under the plans, details of which first emerged on Sunday, NHS records would be made anonymous and data made available to private firms. Under the plans, which were unveiled as part of the Autumn Statement, NHS records would be made anonymous and then made available to private firms.
Closer collaboration could also give companies more freedom to run clinical trials inside hospitals.Closer collaboration could also give companies more freedom to run clinical trials inside hospitals.
Mr Cameron is expected to announce a £180m fund to help commercialise medical breakthroughs, and also reveal plans to consult on an "early access scheme" to put new drugs in NHS hospitals more quickly. Mr Cameron is expected to announce a £180m fund to help commercialise medical breakthroughs, and plans to consult on an "early access scheme" to put new drugs in NHS hospitals more quickly.
In his speech, Mr Cameron is expected to hail the country's "great history", including DNA breakthroughs and the first test-tube baby. "We must ensure that the UK stays ahead," according to extracts of his speech released ahead of it being delivered on Monday. "Because yes, we've got a leading science base; yes, we've got four of the world's top 10 universities; and yes, we have a National Health Service unlike any other.
"We can be proud of our past - but we cannot be complacent about our future. The industry is changing; not just year by year, but month by month," he is due to say.
"Pressure on healthcare budgets in the West, emerging economies in the East, an ageing population, an explosion of knowledge - all creating a new paradigm for life sciences.
"And in this new paradigm, we must ensure that the UK stays ahead. Because yes, we've got a leading science base; yes, we've got four of the world's top 10 universities; and yes, we have a National Health Service unlike any other.
"But my argument today is that these strengths alone are not enough, that to keep pace with what's happening we've got to change radically - the way we innovate, the way we collaborate, the way we open up the NHS.""But my argument today is that these strengths alone are not enough, that to keep pace with what's happening we've got to change radically - the way we innovate, the way we collaborate, the way we open up the NHS."
'Essential safeguards' 'Informed consent'
Ministers believe Britain can become a world leader in the field of life sciences because of the expertise within the NHS and its strong university-based research. Science minister David Willetts told BBC Radio 4's Today programme that, at the moment, research funded by the Medical Research Council often sat in research institutes without being used to benefit patients.
The industry already employs 160,000 people in 4,500 companies, with a turnover of £50bn a year. "They then face the so-called 'valley of death' when the research has been done but there isn't necessarily the proof of concept or the proof of market that would enable a venture capitalist to invest, and it's a long, shaky, perilous path to being commercialised and available in the NHS," he said.
But on Sunday, shadow health secretary Andy Burnham said Labour would not allow Mr Cameron to "throw away essential safeguards" in his desperation to develop a credible industrial strategy. As information was made available, the confidentiality of patients had to be put first, he stressed. "First of all there has to be absolute protection for the confidentiality of the individual patient's data and it shouldn't be possible to trace it back to an individual," he said.
Nick Pickles, of civil liberties group Big Brother Watch, said: "It is for patients, not the government, to decide what happens with their medical information. However, Patient Concern said it had real concerns about the proposals because the information would include postcodes and age profiles which would be possible to trace back to the individuals concerned.
"It appears that commercial interests are being put ahead of patient privacy and that is unacceptable." "The aim is laudable... but the methods, they stink frankly," Joyce Robins, the organisation's founder, said. "Our records should not be passed around by the Department of Health as they see fit or sold to private companies without our permission."
And campaign group Patient Concern said it feared the plans would be the "death of patient confidentiality". Data should only be made available on the basis of patients' "informed consent", she added.
Nick Pickles, of civil liberties group Big Brother Watch, said: "It is for patients, not the government, to decide what happens with their medical information. It appears that commercial interests are being put ahead of patient privacy and that is unacceptable."
Guy Herbert, from NO2ID, which campaigns against the "database state" said the plan sounded similar to Tony Blair government's "transformational government" ideas for data sharing.
"We should control access to our personal information - the government should get to use it only when genuinely necessary," he said.
Labour have said they will not allow Mr Cameron to "throw away essential safeguards" in his desperation to develop a credible industrial strategy.
But the pharmaceutical industry said "robust" safeguards were already in place and it was impossible to trace back anonymised data to individuals.
"We need people to understand that the benefits for all of us - our children and people who have got illnesses - are absolutely essential when it comes to using health records for research," Neil Patel, from the Royal Pharmaceutical Society.
The NHS had a "unique resource" of medical records dating back to the 1940s, he added, and these had already been widely used in furthering understanding of conditions such as HIV and lung cancer.