Transparency and trust - why the DHSC must reveal advisory group members
Thursday, September 3, 2020 at 9:40
Simon Clark

Email sent yesterday to the Department of Health and Social Care:

To whom it may concern

The Guardian today reports that ‘The DHSC has set up a stakeholder advisory group to help it decide who should become responsible for health improvement.’

See ‘Health leaders warn Boris Johnson over axing of Public Health England

I would be grateful if you could send me a list of the individuals (and their relevant organisations) that are on the advisory group (and who will chair it), and the reason/s they were invited to be members of the group.

Kind regards,

Simon Clark
Director, Forest

The reason this matters is because the make up of the advisory group may give us an early indication of what we can expect when Public Health England is put out of its misery next March.

If it’s the usual suspects then expect more of the same, albeit under a different name.

Wouldn’t it be nice, though, if the group included some people from outside the public health bubble.

Also it wouldn’t surprise me if a battle develops between Number Ten and the DHSC over future public health policy (and implementation) and it strikes me that this ‘advisory group’ is the DHSC making the first move to ‘own’ the discussion, and the eventual outcome.

Anyway, the board was apparently due to meet for the first time yesterday so I do hope there will be complete transparency.

Then again, don’t hold your breath because I’ve been here before.

In November 2017, in response to a parliamentary question tabled by Philip Davies MP, it was revealed that Deborah Arnott, CEO of ASH, was a member of something called the smoke free prisons project board.

I had never heard of such a body and could find no mention of it anywhere. So I emailed the Ministry of Justice and among the questions I asked were:

1. Please provide a list of all members of the national smoke free prisons project board.
2. When was the national smoke free prisons project board set up?
3. How many times has the board met since it was set up?
4. Please provide the name of the chair.
5. How is the national smoke free prisons project board funded?

See ‘Questions that need answers’ (Taking Liberties)

Bizarrely the Ministry of Justice declined to answer even one of those questions, citing the “cost limit” which is “the estimated cost of one person spending 3.5 working days determining whether the department holds the information.”

As it happens we currently have a researcher working on another project that involves a series of FOI requests to various government departments and the estimated cost of responding to our enquiries has been cited twice already as the reason why our requests have been declined.

Undeterred we have responded by submitting some more requests that should meet their conditions. It does however mean that some of the information we hoped to elicit will have to wait.

Watch this space.

Article originally appeared on Simon Clark (http://taking-liberties.squarespace.com/).
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