Foreword

Just over a year ago, NHS Confederation commissioned the Health Foundation and the Institute for Fiscal Studies to undertake a study into the funding needs of the UK’s health and care system for the next 15 years. The resulting report, Securing the future, exposed the relentless pressure that is hitting the health and care system, and the funding uplifts critically needed to sustain current provision and modernise the service.

The report was timely and helped influence the climate leading up to the government’s announcement of an improved financial settlement for the NHS. Based on this, NHS England published a long-term plan which spells out a vision for improving patient care over the next decade and how the additional investment will be used.

Local health and care systems now have the task of translating that vision into reality. Across England, sustainability and transformation partnerships and integrated care systems are currently preparing 5-year implementation plans setting out how they will deliver the plan in their local communities.

To help this work, the Health Foundation has produced a new analysis which examines in detail the financial, activity and workforce implications of The NHS long term plan, as well as the key issues with which local systems will need to grapple.

At the heart of The NHS long term plan lies a new service model designed to turbo-charge primary and community care and in turn enable more people to live better and healthier lives in their community. This approach commands widespread support, not least because it offers at least the prospect of starting to manage the pervasive pressure of rising demand and the possibility of creating sustainable services.

Delivering this will be central to the success of the plan. The proposed investment in primary and community services needs to break the transactional treadmill that leads to an acute sector that constantly struggles to cope. However, the briefing sets out that we should not be under any illusion about the scale of the task – achieving this without a front-loaded financial settlement will not be easy. The service will need to draw on all the learning and knowledge available about how best to do this.

The briefing also highlights the unfinished business of the funding settlement. The delivery of The NHS long term plan depends on supporting investment in capital, public health, workforce education and training and in social care. The additional funding announced last year specifically excluded all these elements and it is vital the promise is kept, and this year’s spending review addresses them.

The effects of a prolonged period of underinvestment in these areas is now more apparent than ever.

  • Buildings, equipment and digital technology are all urgently in need of capital investment to enable the delivery of modern and efficient health and care services.
  • The impact on some of the most vulnerable citizens of the social care crisis is hard to overstate and it will continue to damage primary, community and hospital services.
  • With a significant shortfall of more than 100,000 posts the case for increased resources for education and training is compelling.
  • Likewise, the cuts to public health services such as smoking cessation, sexual health and drug and alcohol services have simply left more costs at the doors of the NHS and have left thousands of patients damaged in ways that could have been avoided.

The health service has welcomed the additional funding it has received and acknowledges that this is in sharp contrast to other parts of the public service. But delivering the service change needed will not be easy and expectations of what can be delivered should be tempered. Above all though this briefing is a powerful reminder to government that success will depend on whether it is willing to complete the investment that the health and care system needs. Without it the delivery of The NHS long term plan has to be in doubt.

Niall Dickson

Chief Executive of NHS Confederation

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