Introduction

Over the past century the UK population has grown by around a half,, while life expectancy has increased by more than 20 years. Although improvements have slowed in the most recent decade, longer lives are to be celebrated and, in many ways, capture the progress made by society and the economy over the past century. These changes have been brought about through a combination of improvements in public health, medicines and medical technology, as well as wider socioeconomic factors such as changing living standards, lifestyles and access to public services.,,

But these changes have also brought with them increased demand for health care services. Since 1948, increases in NHS spending have outpaced GDP growth, which generates tax revenue to pay for public services. As a result, public spending on health care services increased from 2.8% of UK GDP in 1955/56 to 7.4% in 2019/20 before the COVID-19 pandemic., In 2019/20, spending on health in the UK was about 12 times the level it was in 1949/50.,

Although the forces that have driven increases in life expectancy remain largely unchanged, today’s economic context is very different. The growth in government health expenditure since 1948 was in large part compensated for by significant reductions in defence spending as a share of GDP that are unlikely to be replicated. Economic growth has stagnated since the 2008 recession, a decade of austerity has left very few other areas of public spending to cut and the baby boomers – who helped to spur economic growth when they entered the labour market – are either retired or approaching retirement. Nearly all England’s projected population growth of 3.5 million between 2019 and 2040 is expected to be among those aged 70 years and older.

This matters because anticipating and planning for how demand for health care services may change over the coming decades is vital for policymaking. Investments in health care delivery (such as training staff and building facilities) must often be made years in advance., Those in charge of public finances therefore need to plan ahead when making choices about how to raise funds for such investment.

About this report

In this report, we estimate the current and project the future burden of illness in England. To do so, we use the best available administrative health care data, which link primary care records with hospital records and mortality. We then combine these data with a cutting-edge model and epidemiological evidence to project how levels of ill health might be expected to change between now and 2040. These projections are based on trends in some risk factors for illness (such as smoking, alcohol and BMI), illness rates, life expectancy and demographics in England.

We also present the projected numbers of people with individual conditions, showing how the changing pattern of ill health at a given age and the changing population structure together drive these trends. Changes in morbidity among an ageing population are the result of the dynamic interaction of complex factors. We therefore provide insights into how prevalence (the share of the population with a condition) depends on the interplay between rates of incidence (or onset) and rates of mortality. Finally, we discuss our findings and the issues policymakers are facing, highlighting key insights and implications for the health care system and beyond.

This report is the first in a new series of projections of illness, health inequalities and health care needs in England from the Health Foundation’s REAL Centre. This research programme is conducted in partnership with the University of Liverpool. The results presented here give a sense of the scale of growth in future health needs in England. This raises questions about future patterns of health inequality and demand for health care resources that will be explored in subsequent research.

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