Discussion and implications

 

Now in Number 10, Liz Truss needs to move beyond the echo chamber of the Conservative party faithful and speak to the concerns of the public at large. The Conservative party leadership campaign provided little detail on how the Truss government will seek to address the major challenges facing health and social care in England. Our analysis has several implications for the new prime minister as she develops her agenda for government.

Public perceptions of health policies and performance remain negative

Overall, the public’s views on the state of health and care in the UK paint a bleak picture. Most people think the standard of NHS care has got worse over the past year – and people think that pressure on NHS staff and waiting lists for routine care have deteriorated in particular. Just 13% think government has the right policies for the NHS.

The public appears slightly more optimistic about the year ahead than they were 6 months ago. This may be because people think the worst of the pandemic is over: concern about the virus is at its lowest level since February 2020, vaccinating people against COVID-19 has tumbled down the list of priorities for the NHS, and most people appear to be relaxed about ending restrictions. But people are still more likely to think standards of care will get worse rather than better. And pressures from COVID-19 on health services have not gone away.

Public concern reflects the reality for health and care services. The record-high waiting list for routine hospital treatment in England could grow to somewhere between 7 and 11 million in 2023. Pressures on emergency care are extreme and are likely to worsen as the NHS heads towards winter. In July 2022, 29,000 people waited more than 12 hours on trolleys in emergency departments for a hospital bed – up from around 2,200 in July last year and 452 in 2019. The Truss government must acknowledge the size of the challenge facing the NHS and social care in England – the scale of government policy response must grow to match it.

The public wants a better health service, not a different health system

The public points to clear priorities for improving health services. Increasing staff numbers and reducing pressures on staff workload are in the public’s top three priorities for the NHS. The same message can be heard loud and clear from health care staff. Only around 27% of staff in the 2021 NHS staff survey said there were enough staff in their organisation for them to do their job properly – down 11 percentage points since 2020. A third reported burnout.

Despite this, the Johnson government failed to produce a detailed plan for ensuring the NHS and social care in England have enough staff to deliver services in the future. And the Treasury has repeatedly failed to provide sufficient long-term funding to train and develop the workforce. A combination of policy changes will be needed – including to boost domestic training and ethical international recruitment, develop more team-based care, improve working conditions, and ensure staff are fairly rewarded. The public is supportive of a mix of measures to do this. The question is whether Truss’s government will take addressing staff shortages more seriously than the last.

Improving access to care is another clear priority for the public. But our survey suggests a potential mismatch between policymakers and the public about how this should be done. While the NHS in England has explicit targets for eliminating the longest waits for routine hospital treatment, the public favours prioritising the most urgent patients even if others have waited longer. In general practice, booking appointments and long waiting times are perceived by the public as the biggest challenges. But we also found increased concern about not being able to see the same GP or other health professional, and not being able to get an appointment in the right format or time. National policymakers need to balance a focus on speed of access with convenience, continuity, and other factors affecting quality of care.,,

While the public perceives that the general standard of NHS care has declined in the past 12 months, support for the basic principles of the NHS remains strong. Pressures on the NHS are often used to fuel a narrative – particularly on the right of the political debate – that the health system needs fundamental ‘reform’, such as switching the NHS funding model.,,, Yet international evidence suggests that no model performs systematically better than others and top-down reorganisations deliver little clear benefit. Our surveys and other evidence suggest that the public wants to see the NHS improved and invested in, not radically restructured.

People support greater government spending to strengthen the health service

Our survey suggests that the public wants to see government spending on the NHS increase. Just over half still support the Health and Care Levy – despite political opposition and the rising cost of living – with strongest support (68%) among Conservative voters. The majority (71%) think the NHS needs a further increase in funding beyond the levy. This sentiment is strongest among those intending to vote Labour (86%), but over half (52%) of people intending to vote Conservative also think more funding is necessary. The public is in favour of a wide range of measures to address NHS staffing problems even if they mean extra public spending, which may lead to tax rises for individuals.

This puts the new prime minister out of step with public opinion. A dominant feature of the Conservative leadership campaign was competing pledges to cut taxes and control public spending. But the Johnson government’s spending plans for the NHS in England are insufficient to recover services after the pandemic. Spending on social care is barely enough to keep up with demand – let alone improve care. And public health budgets are 24% smaller per person than they were in 2015. Spending on health per person in the UK is slightly above the OECD average but significantly less than G7 and western European countries – and well below countries such as France and Germany. Despite the UK tax burden being set to rise to levels not seen since the 1950s, the UK is not a high-tax country by international standards., Ultimately, the level of public spending on health and social care is a political choice. Government must be honest with the public about the consequences of the prime minister’s pledge to make over £30bn in tax cuts and what this means for public services.

Pessimism about social care is high and understanding of the system remains low

Boris Johnson promised to ‘fix’ the crisis in social care in his first speech as prime minister. But, as Johnson leaves office, the UK public does not appear to think the social care system has been fixed. Most people think standards of care have deteriorated over the past year, just 13% expect standards to get better over the next year, and fewer than 1 in 10 people think government has the right policies in place for the system. People in England are more likely than not to support the government’s new cap on social care costs, but awareness of the policy is low. Fundamental reform of adult social care is still desperately needed to address high levels of unmet need, increase quality, and improve terms and conditions for staff.

More generally, misperceptions about who provides social care and how services are funded mean too many individuals and families are set for an unpleasant surprise when they need care. Low awareness also presents challenges for policymakers making the case for reform, as people may be underwhelmed by proposals for improvement – for example, if they assumed care was already free at the point of use. Low awareness is also likely one factor in explaining why so few have given serious consideration to planning for future care costs, even though slightly more of the public agree than disagree this is their responsibility.

The public is concerned about the health of the population

The public is deeply pessimistic about the overall health of the population. The vast majority are concerned about increases in the cost of living – and over half believe that these rising costs pose a high threat to the health of UK citizens. People’s income and financial resources have a major impact on their health: without adequate resources, more families will be unable to fulfil basic needs, such as food and heating, and risk falling into debt. Even before the cost-of-living crisis, poverty was deepening in the UK and there had been more than a decade of sustained low growth in household incomes. Concerns about COVID-19 also remain for a sizeable minority – particularly among disabled people or those with a long-term health condition, and people from ethnic minority backgrounds.

Johnson’s government produced grand political rhetoric on ‘levelling up’ the country. But policy changes and investment needed to improve the social and economic conditions shaping health were limited., Developing a cross-government strategy to improve health and reduce health inequalities should be a priority for the new prime minister – including action to strengthen social security, improve living conditions, and tackle obesity and other major health risk factors. Policies to improve the underlying health of the nation would also help equip the UK for future pandemics – something around half the public thinks government is not well prepared for. The long-awaited ‘health disparities’ white paper provides the Truss government with an opportunity to set out an ambitious agenda for doing so.

Conclusion

The new prime minister inherits a health and care system under extreme strain. The public perceives the standard of NHS and social care services as having declined in the past 12 months – and is more likely to expect that standards will get worse over the next year rather than improve. But the public has strong support for the NHS as an institution and points to clear priorities for improving services. These include expanding the health workforce and improving access to care. A clear majority of the public think greater government investment in the NHS is necessary to help achieve these aims – even if it means higher taxes. At the same time, there is widespread concern about rising living costs and the potential impact on health. Broader government action beyond the health and care system will be needed to protect the nation’s health and tackle wide health inequalities.

Liz Truss promised Conservative party members that she will cut taxes and shrink the state. It is hard to see how the new prime minister can reconcile these commitments with addressing the public’s concerns about health and social care. Failing to do so risks leaving the government out of step with the public as we head towards the next general election.

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