Health experts welcome NHS funding but call for realistic expectations

Updated

Health experts have welcomed funding commitments to help the NHS as a “relief”, but cautioned that money will not immediately solve the mounting pressures facing the health service.

The Government’s pledges to commit an extra £33.9 billion per year provided by 2023/24 will be enshrined in law, the Queen’s Speech set out today.

It comes as the latest statistics from NHS England painted a bleak picture of the winter pressures beleaguering hospitals.

The NHS Funding Bill is intended to be the first piece of domestic legislation put on the statute book after the proposed passing of the Withdrawal Agreement Bill which will lead to Brexit.

The Queen’s Speech also included proposed legislation to abolish hospital car parking charges for “those in greatest need”.

These are likely to include disabled people, parents of sick children staying overnight, and staff working night shifts.

An additional £1 billion for social care every year of the new Parliament alongside reforms will ensure people have the “dignity and security they deserve and that no-one who needs care has to sell their home to pay for it”.

Ministers will seek cross-party consensus on proposals for long-term reform of social care, but there were no details on how the Government would meet its pledge.

Queen’s speech 2019
Queen’s speech 2019

Urging people to be realistic in their expectations, health experts said many of the problems facing the NHS and social care were to do with resourcing and workforce capacity.

They also called for more detail on how the NHS will be funded sustainably, the future immigration system proposed after Brexit and how social care will be reformed.

Deputy chief executive of NHS Providers, Saffron Cordery, said: “We need to be realistic about what this funding will buy and what the public should expect.

“This investment will maintain standards at their current level, but the service needs additional real investment to meet the needs of the future and deliver the improvements we all want to see.

“If, as we fear, expectations exceed reality, we risk creating a damaging blame game which sets the NHS and its staff up to fail and lets patients and the public down.”

Professor Martin Marshall, chairman of the Royal College of GPs, said: “The commitment in law to fund the NHS is both a relief and a necessity. We now need detail and we need general practice to feature prominently in any plans for the future of our health service.”

Siva Anandaciva, chief analyst at The King’s Fund, said: “The Government has promised more money for the NHS but a credible plan to increase the workforce is also urgently needed.

“Even then, it will take time to stabilise services and patients will unfortunately continue to wait longer to receive the care that they need.”

The latest weekly performance report from NHS England shows that hospital bed occupancy rates are up from last year and remain higher than recommended safe levels.

The number of ambulance delays exceeding an hour have almost tripled in a year, from 1,491 in 2018 to 4,469 in the week up to December 15.

Attendances at A&E have risen compared to last year, to just under 100,000 in the same week, and increasing numbers of patients are staying in beds for a week or longer.

"As we enter the #YearOfTheNurseandMidwife, we are embarking on the biggest nursing recruitment drive in decades, backed by a new universal support package" – @MattHancock

Here's what this means for our next generation of nurses 🔽https://t.co/YXBQa2il59#WeAreTheNHSpic.twitter.com/2pUDGIBICm

— Department of Health and Social Care (@DHSCgovuk) December 18, 2019

At the same time, 892 beds were closed due to norovirus on average each day – almost double the number this time last year.

Dr Nick Scriven, for the Society for Acute Medicine, said: “The NHS is under the most pressure it has ever seen and quite how we will get through the next few weeks and months remains to be seen.

“We need to urgently support our staff throughout the NHS as they are reaching the stage of utter exhaustion after more than two years of unrelenting and increasing stress and workload.

“Promises or commitments of investment today will not make up for years in a matter of months, which is what would be needed to get us through the winter period safely. It is the bare minimum.”

Niall Dickson, chief executive of the NHS Confederation, which represents organisations across the healthcare sector, said: “The NHS is grateful to the Secretary of State and the Prime Minister for their continued commitment to the NHS and we share their ambition for a transformed service by 2030.

“But we need to be honest about the state of things now, which is not all bad, but also not all good. Importantly, we need to acknowledge that it will take time to turns things around.

“Many of the answers lie in training and recruiting more staff, developing new services in the community, and joining up different parts of the system. None of these can be conjured up overnight.”

Advertisement