My Lords, I have put down this amendment to explore briefly the Government’s thinking on the appointments set out in the amendment. As has already been said, I am sure we are all delighted that Professor Sir Mike Richards has been appointed Chief Inspector of Hospitals. I was doubtful about the practicality of this post but if anybody can make a success of it, I think Mike Richards can. Why did the Government not make this a statutory post? Is it because they see it as a time-limited appointment?
The second part of the amendment explores a slightly wider issue. I know that the post of Chief Inspector of Social Care has been advertised but does the Minister think that the post has been too narrowly drawn and represents a bit of a missed opportunity? I know from remarks he has made at events I have been at that the Health Secretary has considered whether there should be a chief inspector of primary care, which I am sure has strengthened his relationship with GPs. For my part, poking around in some of the murkier corners of primary care and trying to strengthen it would be no bad thing.
However, the wider system problem we face in the NHS is the weakness of the combined set of non-hospital services and their integration with social care. That weakness is now leading to moves in some places for acute hospitals to think of themselves as the base for community-based services. I suspect that is a development we will regret in the longer term, particularly if those services end up bearing a disproportionately high amount of the overhead costs of acute hospitals. Can the Minister say a little more about whether the Government are considering appointing a chief inspector of primary care and whether further consideration could be given to widening the brief of the Chief Inspector of Social Care to embrace community health services and possibly primary care? I beg to move.