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NHS CB to launch a Commissioning Academy

NHS CB to launch a Commissioning Academy
30 April 2012



The NHS Commissioning Board (NHS CB) is planning to launch a ‘Commissioning Academy’ to reinforce the Board’s role in the support and development of CCGs.


Speaking at the NHS Clinical Commissioners conference in London last week (24 April), Dame Barbara Hakin, Director of Commissioning Development for the NHS CB, confirmed a ‘Commissioning Academy’ is in development to provide a platform for NHS CB senior figures to engage with CCG leaders and Accountable Officers.

The NHS Commissioning Board (NHS CB) is planning to launch a ‘Commissioning Academy’ to reinforce the Board’s role in the support and development of CCGs.


Speaking at the NHS Clinical Commissioners conference in London last week (24 April), Dame Barbara Hakin, Director of Commissioning Development for the NHS CB, confirmed a ‘Commissioning Academy’ is in development to provide a platform for NHS CB senior figures to engage with CCG leaders and Accountable Officers.


Hakin said there will be a “shared responsibility of leadership” among the NHS CB and CCGs.


“We are currently working with design group of emerging CCG leads, to explore how we can best build effective working relationships to really drive effective commissioning," said a spokesperson from the NHS CB.


"Ideas are evolving for a clinical commissioning assembly that brings together the clinical lead in each CCG with the senior leadership team across the NHS Commissioning Board.”


It is not yet known when the Academy is likely to be launched nor what its final structure will look like.


Hakin also confirmed the NHS CB will have the final say when it comes to the appointment of a CCG’s Accountable Officer – while not getting involved in the interviewing process.


Also speaking at the same event, NHS CB Chair Professor Malcolm Grant said the Board will manage to have individual and personalised relationships with CCGs and will provide no central direction.


He also spoke of the need for the Board to have an “intelligible, clear and executable mandate”.


He said the government must resist explaining every clinical condition and produce a mandate “that could be printed in The Sun”.

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