Alan Milburn

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Alan Milburn (born 27 January 1958) is a Labour MP for Darlington. He was Chief Secretary at Treasury from December 1998 to October 1999, and Secretary of State at Department of Health between October 1999 and June 2003.[1]


Activities

Anti-obesity initiatives

In May 2007 Milburn became an advisor to Pepsico one of the organisations involved in Business4Life the business consortium behind the Department of Health's Change4life anti-obesity initiative. [2] Pepsico and its subsidiary Walkers Crisps are clients of Freud Communications. Freud Communications were hired by the Department of Health to run its anti-obesity campaign.[3]


PFI initiatives

During his time as Chief Secretary to the Treasury and Secretary of State for Health, Milburn was instrumental in driving forward the Government's policy of PFI initiatives in the health service. [4] During his time at the Treasury Milburn stated

"The Government's commitment to partnership between the public and private sector has never been greater. The Government's new guidelines will make PFI work more effectively and more fairly. This will help deliver higher levels of investment to modernise Britain's key public services such as the NHS. By providing a platform of certainty, the new guidance will help the PFI continue to grow. Value for money deals go hand in hand with the key test of genuine risk transfer achieved under PFI contracts. This clarity of approach will enable the revised guidance to work in practice." [5]

Milburn is currently on the advisory board of Bridgepoint Capital. [6] He appears to have joined them in January 2007. Bridgepoint is a venture capital firm heavily involved in financing private health care firms moving into the NHS. Milburn previously worked as an advisor to Bridgepoint between March and September 2004.[7]


Scanner scandal

In 2005 the Labour Party were accused of trying to gag one of its own MPs who strongly criticised a £90 million deal between the NHS and a private health company linked to Milburn.

Kevan Jones, the MP for North Durham, revealed that patients from his constituency were being sent 20 miles for private MRI scans, even though their own local hospital had a machine standing idle. Jones had spoken out in support of John Saxby, the chief executive of the University Hospital of North Durham, who complained about the purchase of scans from Alliance Medical, while his own NHS scanner was "considerably under-employed".

Alliance Medical was owned by Bridgepoint and the £90 million scanner deal was signed while Milburn was working for Bridegpoint. The contract for the scanner was announced by John Hutton, the then health minister who is a friend of Milburn.

According to press reports Jones' comments provoked a telephone call to the MP from a Labour Party official demanding an explanation and warning him that they should not be repeated. Jones himself refused to confirm the claim. [8]

Affiliations


Publications, Contact, Resources and Notes

Publications

Contact

Address:
Phone:
Email:
Website:


Resources


Notes and References

  1. They Work For You, Alan Milburn MP, accessed 28 November 2008.
  2. Business4Life Home page, Accessed December 9 2008
  3. Matt Cartmel, Freud Lands Anti-obesity brief,Brand Republic, July 31 2008, Accessed December 9 2008
  4. HM Treasury MORE PRIVATE FINANCE INITIATIVE (PFI) DEALS EXPECTED June 24 1999, Accesed December 9 2008
  5. HM Treasury MORE PRIVATE FINANCE INITIATIVE (PFI) DEALS EXPECTED June 24 1999, Accesed December 9 2008
  6. Bridgepoint Capital Advisory Board, Accessed December 9 2008
  7. They work for you Members listing May 2004, Accessed December 9 2008
  8. Hennessy, Patrick Labour orders MP to keep quiet over Milburn scan deal Telegraph March 26 2005, Accessed December 9 2008
  9. Smithers, Rebecca, "Beyoncé, Britney ... Milburn? Ex-minister takes Pepsi challenge," Guardian, 30 May 2007, accessed 28 November 2008.
  10. Walker, Tim, "Milburn in the money," Telegraph, 30 April 2008, accessed 28 November 2008.
  11. Swaine, Jon, "MPs could face ban on second jobs," Telegraph, 24 July 2008, accessed 28 November 2008.
  12. Swaine, Jon, "MPs could face ban on second jobs," Telegraph, 24 July 2008, accessed 28 November 2008.