NHS Procurement
Author
Discussion

e600

Original Poster:

1,522 posts

176 months

Tuesday 17th November 2020
quotequote all
I am just putting this out there in case any NHS Procurement Officers are Reading this. I will provide masks, which may or may not work for the NHS’s needs for less than £21,000,000 commission.

I am utterly astounded at the sheer incompetence regarding this issue as reported on tonight’s news.

How can anyone let a contract for expense items, ie not capital equipment, at this level of payable commission, and it’s payable out of NHS funds. This commission was paid to essentially a Miami based fashion brand owner on his promise to supply x number of ppe in a certain timeFrame. He subcontracted the requirement to a third party who was looking for£1,600,000 in commission.

The MOD used to have the record for duffest procurement, but think this has exceeded even their poorest performance.

Tryke3

1,609 posts

118 months

Tuesday 17th November 2020
quotequote all
Vote for monkeys get a circus ?

Heartworm

1,938 posts

185 months

Tuesday 17th November 2020
quotequote all
I don’t think it’s the NHS that arranged this, the PPE was for the NHS and procured by the department of health.

buckline

377 posts

187 months

Tuesday 17th November 2020
quotequote all
These leaks have Cummings written all over them. Hell hath no fury like a SpAd scorned.

Heartworm

1,938 posts

185 months

Tuesday 17th November 2020
quotequote all
buckline said:
These leaks have Cummings written all over them. Hell hath no fury like a SpAd scorned.
These leaks are coming from the us courts are they not?

e600

Original Poster:

1,522 posts

176 months

Tuesday 17th November 2020
quotequote all
buckline said:
These leaks have Cummings written all over them. Hell hath no fury like a SpAd scorned.
Think the news was generated as a result of mr big commission refusing to pay mr small commission and a court case revealing all.

Partyvan

464 posts

154 months

Tuesday 17th November 2020
quotequote all
Large public body is incompetent and wasteful. In other news, cold weather incoming this winter!

R Mutt

5,896 posts

96 months

Tuesday 17th November 2020
quotequote all
What I don't understand is the items that turn out not to meet specifications. How many steps along the way have these been certified? Surely whoever deemed them unfit should've been the same person to approve the purchase. If not as described, contract void. Although it seems the government didn't attempt that in the case of the ear loop masks. Although why didn't they just tie knots on the ear loops if required?

nikaiyo2

5,801 posts

219 months

Tuesday 17th November 2020
quotequote all
If you have ever had the misfortune of supplying anything to the NHS you will understand that literally no level of incompetence is unbelievable.


Teddy Lop

8,301 posts

91 months

Tuesday 17th November 2020
quotequote all
nikaiyo2 said:
If you have ever had the misfortune of supplying anything to the NHS you will understand that literally no level of incompetence is unbelievable.
yes

Did a lot of work in hospitals and LA housing during my apprenticeship for the leccy board. Still find myself involved with the latter from time to time.

The ability of both (and every other governmental unanswerable entity) to take routine stupid little nothing jobs and complicate them into costing 2 or 3 or 4 times more than they should would be astounding were it not so tiresomely predictable.

PeteinSQ

2,346 posts

234 months

Tuesday 17th November 2020
quotequote all
I work in pricing for a pharma company here in the UK. The NHS bought some medicines for us. They told us what they wanted to pay, it was three times what we could normally get for it so we said of course. Now in the grand scheme of things this was a relatively small amount, but I can only assume that the DH just doesn't have the staff and therefore the time to look into things properly. Which is nuts when the staff wouldn't be that expensive and could save a lot more money than they cost.

Mouse Rat

2,042 posts

116 months

Tuesday 17th November 2020
quotequote all
I know quite a few companies and personnel who made very good money earlier this year supplying equipment to the NHS Trusts and PHE during Covid.
Nothing wrong, supply and demand.



Pesty

42,655 posts

280 months

Tuesday 17th November 2020
quotequote all
nikaiyo2 said:
If you have ever had the misfortune of supplying anything to the NHS you will understand that literally no level of incompetence is unbelievable.
It’s criminal.

And nobody gives a fk. Institutionalised incompetence

Edited by Pesty on Tuesday 17th November 22:39

Sway

33,731 posts

218 months

Tuesday 17th November 2020
quotequote all
anonymous said:
[redacted]
Logistics still isn't sorted - Folkestone is rammed to the gills with thousands of containers of PPE sat waiting to be removed.

Murph7355

40,923 posts

280 months

Tuesday 17th November 2020
quotequote all
MX5Biologist said:
The NAO are working on a report on the procurement of PPE during the start of the Pandemic. It shpuld be published I think in the next couple of weeks.

They reported on ventilators, and its interesting reading in painting a picture of what was going on, globally, in February and March:

https://www.nao.org.uk/report/increasing-ventilato...

Essentially it was every country for themselves. EU common procurement failed to deliver any ventilators. Huge markups on available stock once suppliers got whiff a government was involved, and gazumping of stock was occurring.

The government had to approach manufacturers indirectly.
Absolutely.

When the st storms were kicking off in the media about PPE, quite a few of us predicted this would be the next thing.

The next will be a government trying to quietly dispose of out of date PPE that was never used at great cost financially and to the environment.

PeteinSQ

2,346 posts

234 months

Tuesday 17th November 2020
quotequote all
Murph7355 said:
Absolutely.

When the st storms were kicking off in the media about PPE, quite a few of us predicted this would be the next thing.

The next will be a government trying to quietly dispose of out of date PPE that was never used at great cost financially and to the environment.
I thought it was interesting that Hancock was trying to spin this huge increase in testing capacity as having long term benefits for the country. I just can't see how a huge glut of testing equipment is going to be a big help once we get past this. Suppliers of diagnostic equipment (PCR machines etc) are going to have a bleak few years after this one though.

Murph7355

40,923 posts

280 months

Tuesday 17th November 2020
quotequote all
PeteinSQ said:
Murph7355 said:
Absolutely.

When the st storms were kicking off in the media about PPE, quite a few of us predicted this would be the next thing.

The next will be a government trying to quietly dispose of out of date PPE that was never used at great cost financially and to the environment.
I thought it was interesting that Hancock was trying to spin this huge increase in testing capacity as having long term benefits for the country. I just can't see how a huge glut of testing equipment is going to be a big help once we get past this. Suppliers of diagnostic equipment (PCR machines etc) are going to have a bleak few years after this one though.
If you take the view that this won't be the last pandemic and that with the way everyone lives they are likely to become more frequent then maybe he has a point.

The question is, how much are we prepared to pay to maintain it.

This was the problem with PPE in the first place. How did we have such low stockpiles of the stuff? Because to have st loads of equipment with "sell by dates" on it sat around JIC would have resulted in the newbie journalist for <insert rag> exposing the sheer waste in the NHS smile

I did some work in business recovery a while ago. Threats of terrorism were on the up and the clients I worked for had a mandate to start looking at options. The programme ended up running to hundreds of millions and the timing of it was fortuitous for all manner of reasons and not just business recovery/continuity...but over time as threats diminished and costs became paramount, the thing was wound down and no longer exists. It's the same sort of balance.

If they maintain the capability (which I don't see happening) then they (whoever is in power) will be ridiculed if there is no pandemic in the remainder of their term. If they don't and there is one they will be ridiculed. Don't maintain and there is no pandemic, nobody notices. So there's only one of the 4 options that results in a positive outcome. We shouldn't wonder why they take the paths they do.

The country is full of know it alls who have the luxury of both hindsight and not having to be concerned with the practicalities of "normal" running and the choices that need to be made.

If you have to rush through procurement in a situation like we had, people will have to cut corners and you will pay over the odds. To be in any other position is going to cost in other ways...

e600

Original Poster:

1,522 posts

176 months

Wednesday 18th November 2020
quotequote all
Murph7355 said:
PeteinSQ said:
Murph7355 said:
Absolutely.

When the st storms were kicking off in the media about PPE, quite a few of us predicted this would be the next thing.

The next will be a government trying to quietly dispose of out of date PPE that was never used at great cost financially and to the environment.
I thought it was interesting that Hancock was trying to spin this huge increase in testing capacity as having long term benefits for the country. I just can't see how a huge glut of testing equipment is going to be a big help once we get past this. Suppliers of diagnostic equipment (PCR machines etc) are going to have a bleak few years after this one though.
If you take the view that this won't be the last pandemic and that with the way everyone lives they are likely to become more frequent then maybe he has a point.

The question is, how much are we prepared to pay to maintain it.

This was the problem with PPE in the first place. How did we have such low stockpiles of the stuff? Because to have st loads of equipment with "sell by dates" on it sat around JIC would have resulted in the newbie journalist for <insert rag> exposing the sheer waste in the NHS smile

I did some work in business recovery a while ago. Threats of terrorism were on the up and the clients I worked for had a mandate to start looking at options. The programme ended up running to hundreds of millions and the timing of it was fortuitous for all manner of reasons and not just business recovery/continuity...but over time as threats diminished and costs became paramount, the thing was wound down and no longer exists. It's the same sort of balance.

If they maintain the capability (which I don't see happening) then they (whoever is in power) will be ridiculed if there is no pandemic in the remainder of their term. If they don't and there is one they will be ridiculed. Don't maintain and there is no pandemic, nobody notices. So there's only one of the 4 options that results in a positive outcome. We shouldn't wonder why they take the paths they do.

The country is full of know it alls who have the luxury of both hindsight and not having to be concerned with the practicalities of "normal" running and the choices that need to be made.

If you have to rush through procurement in a situation like we had, people will have to cut corners and you will pay over the odds. To be in any other position is going to cost in other ways...
Regardless of the above I struggle to understand how any contract can be let to a third party independent handler with a £21,000,000 commission clause. He was a small clothes retailer based in Miami. I could sort of understand a profit margin for a well established internationally recognised Pharma, but Joe Bloggs selling jeans, tee shirts and baseball caps sourced out of China?

roboxm3

2,477 posts

219 months

Wednesday 18th November 2020
quotequote all
Lots of misinformation and incorrect assumptions in this thread.

I'm in no way defending the PPE procurement process but fingers are being pointed in the wrong direction due to a lack of understanding regarding the Covid-response procurement set-up and leadership.


marksx

5,171 posts

214 months

Wednesday 18th November 2020
quotequote all
Murph7355 said:
Absolutely.

When the st storms were kicking off in the media about PPE, quite a few of us predicted this would be the next thing.

The next will be a government trying to quietly dispose of out of date PPE that was never used at great cost financially and to the environment.
And nightingale hospitals. Let's build loads of bed capacity. Who's going to staff it? Erm....