Difference between revisions of "Barbara Hakin"

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Dame '''Barbara Hakin''' is the national managing director of commissioning development at the [[Department for Health]].
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Dame '''Barbara Hakin''' was Deputy Chief Executive of [[NHS England]] until 2015, and previously national managing director of commissioning development at the [[Department for Health]].
  
 
According to the ''Health Service Journal'', Dame Barbara Hakin is vitally important to the relationship between the future of the NHS and the current leadership: "Ask anyone in the DH who is in charge of the 75 per cent of the future of the NHS that is concerned with commissioning, and time after time people tell you that person is Dame Barbara."<ref>Health Service Journal, [http://www.hsj.co.uk/home/hsj-100/007-dame-barbara-hakin/5021927.article HSJ100 2010], 17 November, 2010</ref>   
 
According to the ''Health Service Journal'', Dame Barbara Hakin is vitally important to the relationship between the future of the NHS and the current leadership: "Ask anyone in the DH who is in charge of the 75 per cent of the future of the NHS that is concerned with commissioning, and time after time people tell you that person is Dame Barbara."<ref>Health Service Journal, [http://www.hsj.co.uk/home/hsj-100/007-dame-barbara-hakin/5021927.article HSJ100 2010], 17 November, 2010</ref>   

Revision as of 06:38, 24 October 2018

Dame Barbara Hakin was Deputy Chief Executive of NHS England until 2015, and previously national managing director of commissioning development at the Department for Health.

According to the Health Service Journal, Dame Barbara Hakin is vitally important to the relationship between the future of the NHS and the current leadership: "Ask anyone in the DH who is in charge of the 75 per cent of the future of the NHS that is concerned with commissioning, and time after time people tell you that person is Dame Barbara."[1]

Activities

Correspondence (emails) disclosed to Spinwatch under the Freedom of Information Act 2000 show that in October 2010, Tribal Group, an outsourcing firm with £150m worth of government contracts, wrote to Hakin about the level of staff to be provided by the private sector to GP consortia.[2]

Notes

  1. Health Service Journal, HSJ100 2010, 17 November, 2010
  2. Michael Gillard, Andy Rowell and Tamasin Cave, Revealed: Government Secretly Uses Doctors to Spin Tribal War for NHS Hearts and Minds (oh! And £80 Billion), Spinwatch, 9 March 2011