Simon Stevens (NHS England)

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Simon Stevens
Chief Executive of NHS England
Assumed office
1 April 2014
Preceded by Sir David Nicholson
Lambeth Borough Councillor for Angell Ward
In office
7 May 1998 – 2 May 2002
Personal details
Born Shard End, Birmingham, England
Political party Labour
Alma mater Balliol College, Oxford

Simon Stevens is a health manager and politician. His appointment[1] as chief executive of NHS England with effect from 1 April 2014 was announced in October 2013, succeeding David Nicholson. He was said by the Health Service Journal in December 2013 to be the second most powerful person in the English NHS, even though he had not yet taken up his appointment.[2]

Personal life

Simon Stevens was born in Shard End, Birmingham, England 1966. He was in hospital with a hip problem for the best part of a school term when he was seven. He was educated at St. Bartholomew's School and Balliol College, Oxford where he was president of the Oxford Union. He received an MBA from Strathclyde University, Glasgow, and was a Harkness Fellow at Columbia University, New York. His wife, Maggie, who is an American public health specialist, gave birth to their son on Christmas Day 2003 at St Thomas' Hospital.[3]

Labour Party

He was a Labour councillor for Brixton, in the London Borough of Lambeth 1998–2002.

NHS

From 1988 to 1997 he worked as healthcare manager in the UK and internationally. He started his NHS professional career on the NHS Graduate Management Training Scheme with a week's work experience as a hospital porter and doing paperwork in a mortuary in Durham. Later, he moved on to be general manager for mental health services at North Tyneside and Northumberland and later group manager of Guy's and St Thomas’ hospitals in London.[4] In 1997 he was appointed policy adviser to two Secretaries of State for Health (Frank Dobson and Alan Milburn) and from 2001 to 2004 was health policy adviser to Tony Blair. He was closely associated with the development of the NHS Plan 2000.

UnitedHealth

From 2004 to 2006 he was president of UnitedHealth Europe and moved on to be chief executive officer of UnitedHealthcare Medicare & Retirement and then president, Global Health, and UnitedHealth Group executive vice president of UnitedHealth Group. During this time he also served on the boards of various non-profits, including the King's Fund; the Nuffield Trust; the Minnesota Historical Society; the Minnesota Opera; the Medicare Rights Center (New York); and the Commonwealth Fund (New York). In October 2013, the speaker biography of Stevens for a health networking conference read: "His responsibilities include leading UnitedHealth’s strategy for, and engagement with, national health reform, ensuring its businesses are positioned for changes in the market and regulatory environment."[5]

While in the USA, living in Minnesota, he continued to write articles about the NHS.

Chief executive of NHS England

Stevens has repeatedly said that the traditional system of GP surgeries being totally separate from hospitals is ‘past its use-by date’. He told the Royal College of General Practitioners in October 2014 ‘We need to tear up the design flaw in the 1948 NHS model where family doctors were organised entirely separately from hospital specialists and where patients with chronic health conditions are increasingly passed from pillar to post between different bits of health and social services’.[6] He was responsible for the Five Year Forward View produced by NHS England in October 2014. As of 2015, Stevens was paid a salary of between £190,000 and £194,999 by NHS England, making him one of the 328 most highly paid people in the British public sector at that time.[7]

According to Fraser Nelson, hiring Stevens back to run NHS England was one of the cleverest moves that David Cameron has made because he "knows more about NHS problems and market solutions than any man alive".[8]

He appeared on Any Questions? in November 2015.[9]

He proposed, in January 2016, to impose a 20% sugar tax on food and drink NHS hospital cafes, justifying the proposal by saying "Because of the role that the NHS occupies in national life, all of us working in the NHS have a responsibility not just to support those who look after patients, but also to draw attention to and make the case for some of the wider changes that will actually improve the health of this country. "It's not just the well-being of people in this country and our children. But it's also the sustainability of the NHS itself." In March 2016 George Osborne announced a tax on sugary drinks.[10]


Sugar tax

Publications

References

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