LONDON, ENGLAND - MAY 18: Protestors attend a demonstration against privatisation of the National Health Service on May 18, 2013 in London, England. Demonstrators from various groups including London residents, medical staff, trade unions are calling on the Government to alter their plans for hospital closures and to decrease provision of NHS services by private companies.
STAFFORD, ENGLAND - APRIL 20: NHS staff and campaigners hold signs as they rally outside Stafford Hospital as they demonstrate to keep major health services at the scandal hit Stafford Hospital on April 20, 2013 in Stafford, England. The march was organised by the Support Stafford Hospital campaign group who are fighting cuts to major health services at the hospital. The Health regulator monitor has appointed two special administrators to produce a plan for the reorganisation of future services.
Ryan Ackroyd, 26, arrives at Southwark Crown Court in central London, April 9, 2013. Ackroyd pleaded guilty to one count of launching cyber attacks on organisations including Sony, Nintendo, Britain's National Health Service and Rupert Murdoch's News International.
LONDON, ENGLAND - MARCH 26: National Health Service supporters demonstrate near Parliament on March 26, 2013 in London, England. The government have announced new measures to improve healthcare in the wake of the Stafford Hospital care scandal.
Demonstrators hold posters calling for the resignation of National Health Service (NHS) Chief Executive David Nicholson outside Portcullis House in London March 5, 2013. The NHS chief appeared before a Health Select Committee to be questioned by Members of Parliament about the Stafford Hospital scandal.
Members of the media gather to interview Lyn Hill-Tout, chief executive of Mid Staffordshire NHS Foundation Trust, at Stafford Hospital in central England February 6, 2013. The deaths of hundreds of hospital patients, left without food or water in filthy conditions, exposed an urgent need to change the culture of Britain's National Health Service (NHS), a report said on Wednesday. Between 400 and 1,200 patients are estimated to have died needlessly at Stafford Hospital in central England between January 2005 and March 2009 in one of the worst scandals to hit the NHS since it was founded in 1948.