Babylon Health and Dominic Cummings have/had a generic relationship

Client Babylon Health
Advisor Dominic Cummings
Notes Dominic Cummings accused of conflict of interest over NHS fund This article is more than 1 year old Boris Johnson’s aide was consultant for AI startup that could win share of £250m fund James Ball, Simon Murphy and Ben Stockton Fri 11 Oct 2019 07.00 EDTLast modified on Fri 11 Oct 2019 07.22 EDT Shares 4,005 Dominic Cummings at the Conservative party conference in September Dominic Cummings advised Babylon Health on its communications strategy. Photograph: Stefan Rousseau/PA Boris Johnson’s most senior aide, Dominic Cummings, is facing conflict of interest accusations over a consultancy role he undertook for a government-endorsed healthcare startup that is in position to receive a share of a new £250m flagship public fund. Cummings advised Babylon Health, a controversial artificial intelligence (AI) firm working within the NHS, on its communications strategy and its senior recruitment, an investigation by the Guardian and the Bureau of Investigative Journalism can reveal. A GP app developed by the company was later backed publicly on multiple occasions by the health secretary, Matt Hancock. The former Vote Leave campaign director’s formal role with Babylon concluded in July last year but he continued to advise the firm about recruitment until September 2018 – the same month Hancock visited the firm and told staff he wanted the NHS to help the company expand. In August this year, shortly after Boris Johnson entered No 10 with Cummings as his top adviser, Downing Street and the Department of Health announced a £250m fund to boost the use of AI in the NHS by using automated systems for diagnoses or data analysis. Although the money has yet to be allocated, Babylon – which welcomed the announcement – is well placed to benefit as a key player in the AI field. Profile Who is Dominic Cummings? Show Advertisement Babylon already holds a contract with Hammersmith and Fulham clinical commissioning group (CCG), in west London, to provide NHS GP appointments via phone and video link to patients through its GP at Hand app. Although more than 50,000 have signed up for the service, the app is said to have increased the cash-strapped CCG’s costs, creating a £21.6m funding hole [paywall]. Earlier this year it was confirmed that the GP app was set to be introduced in Birmingham and this month Babylon announced plans to take it to Manchester in 2020. Babylon recently raised $550m (£449m) in a new funding round led by Saudi Arabia’s sovereign wealth fund, valuing it at $2bn. It is recruiting heavily, with more than 40 adverts for AI-related roles listed on its website. There are no political rules requiring special advisers to disclose previous private sector roles. The Guardian Today newsletter: the headlines, the analysis, the debate – sent direct to you Read more However, the shadow health secretary, Jonathan Ashworth, said Cummings’ undisclosed advisory role raised serious questions about potential conflicts of interest. “The links between Dominic Cummings in the heart of Downing Street, the health secretary and this AI health firm are increasingly murky and highly irresponsible,” he told the Guardian. “Mr Cummings’ work for this company raises serious questions about a potential conflict of interest, given the firm could be in line to receive public money from this new £250m AI fund. “We need to know if he declared his work for the firm to the cabinet secretary when he joined the government payroll. If not, why not?” Andy Slaughter, the Labour MP for Hammersmith and Fulham where Babylon’s GP app launched, said: “Babylon is an organisation which is, via its GP at Hand app, distorting and undermining the whole basis on which primary care has worked since the founding of the NHS. “It’s not just privatisation, it is undermining the ability of local GPs to serve their patients in a sustainable way … To learn that the prime minister’s top adviser has been paid to help the firm is deeply concerning. “Cummings’ work for Babylon raises a clear conflict of interest [concern].” Hancock repeatedly boosted Babylon and promised to help change rules to benefit the company. In September 2018, soon after his appointment as health secretary, he visited Babylon and told staff how much he admired their work and wanted the NHS to help the company grow. In an accompanying Telegraph interview, Hancock praised the company and said he used its GP app. “GP at Hand is revolutionary,” he told the newspaper. “I want to see GP at Hand available to all, not based on their postcode.” Hancock was criticised for a further endorsement of Babylon’s app in a feature sponsored by the company in the Evening Standard two months later. The app is controversial with some NHS clinicians, who are concerned it could leave conventional GP services underfunded and with only the most difficult patients. They also have concerns about the reliability of its AI for diagnosis. The decision to allocate £250m a year to AI projects in health – via NHSX, a “healthtech” public body launched by Hancock earlier this year – could benefit Babylon, experts suggest. Sam Smith, the head of policy at the patient confidentiality campaign group MedConfidential, said there was good reason to believe a large chunk of the £250m would go to private companies such as Babylon given the government has previously required NHS data and innovation projects to have commercial partners on board. “The current government has a policy that all analytics must involve private companies, so whether [private companies] get the whole £250m or just most of it is a political decision,” he said. “A public option for AIs used by the NHS is necessary to ensure a competitive market.” Babylon confirmed Cummings was paid via his company, Dynamic Maps Ltd, which he set up in October 2017 as the sole director. The firm – said to provide “information technology consultancy activities” – has net assets worth £78,751, according to Companies House records. Downing Street declined to answer detailed questions about Cummings’ consultancy work, including his earnings from Babylon, which other firms he had advised, and why it had not been publicly disclosed. A spokesman said: “Special advisers act in accordance with special advisers’ code and the relevant provisions of the civil service code, acting with integrity, and serving the public interest. Special advisers have no role in authorising expenditure of public funds.” The Department of Health did not respond when asked whether Hancock was aware of Cummings’ role at Babylon. In a statement, Babylon stressed Cummings’ role had been a “very short piece of one-off consultancy to draft a communications strategy”, with 10 days worked in total. “Babylon helps the NHS by reducing A&E visits by 3.8% (4,560 fewer visits per year at our current size) – and at no extra cost to the NHS. Our symptom checker tool has been used over 1.5m times and no patient has ever reported a serious problem.” It said of the government’s £250m fund: “Governments around the world are investing in AI and it’s brilliant that the UK government is following suit.” Topics Dominic Cummings Boris Johnson Conservatives Matt Hancock Artificial intelligence (AI) NHS Health policy news Share on LinkedInShare on Pinterest Reuse this content Advertisement most viewed in US US election polls tracker: who is leading in swing states, Trump or Biden? The man who wants to help you out of debt – at any cost Live US election 2020: confusion after court rules to separate Minnesota ballots that arrive late – as it happened The polls point to a Biden victory but can they be trusted this time? Trump aide Stephen Miller preparing second-term immigration blitz
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