NHS Services for Private Patients
There have been votes in Parliament on restricting the ability of NHS Trusts to generate income from private patients.
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Caroline Flint consistently voted for restricting the provision of services to private patients by the NHS
TheyWorkForYou has automatically calculated this MP’s stance based on all
of their votes on the topic. You can browse the source
data on PublicWhip.org.uk.
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On 13 Mar 2012:
Caroline Flint voted against proposed NHS reforms including giving more power to GPs to commission services, strengthening the Care Quality Commission, and cutting admin costs for example by abolishing Primary Care Trusts.
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This policy conflicts with:
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On 13 Mar 2012:
Caroline Flint voted against proposed NHS reforms including giving more power to GPs to commission services, strengthening the Care Quality Commission, and cutting admin costs for example by abolishing Primary Care Trusts.
Show vote
This policy conflicts with:
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On 16 Jan 2012:
Caroline Flint voted to reduce the amount of income a NHS foundation trust is permitted to make from private patients.
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On 26 Oct 2011:
Caroline Flint voted to drop the Health and Social Care Bill and to enter cross party talks on reforming NHS commissioning.
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This policy conflicts with:
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On 7 Sep 2011:
Caroline Flint voted against proposed NHS reforms including giving more power to GPs to commission services, strengthening the Care Quality Commission, and cutting admin costs for example by abolishing Primary Care Trusts.
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This policy conflicts with:
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On 6 Sep 2011:
Caroline Flint voted to continue restricting the amount of income a foundation trust can earn from private charges, known as the "private patient income cap".
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On 16 Mar 2011:
Caroline Flint voted to stop the Government's NHS reorganisation.
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This policy conflicts with:
Agreements are when Parliament takes a decision without holding a vote.
This does not necessarily mean universal approval, but does mean there were no (or few) objections made to the decision being made.
No scoring agreements are part of this policy while this member was elected.
Agreements are when Parliament takes a decision without holding a vote.
This does not necessarily mean universal approval, but does mean there were no (or few) objections made to the decision being made.
No informative agreements are part of this policy while this member was elected.