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Caring Closer to Home
ON Tuesday, 13 February 2024, The King's Fund published their report calling for a radical refocusing of health and care systems, to put Primary and Community Services at its core. According to the report, the YJ has seen a failure to grow and invest in Primary and Community health and care services, despite successive Governments stating a commitment to this agenda, which is 1 of the most significant and long running policy failures of the past 30 years.
The vast majority of interactions with the NHS are through Primary and Community Services; such as:- General Practice (GPs), Community Pharmacy, and District Nursing. On average there are more than 876,164 GP appointments in the NHS every day, an increase of 34,219 appointments a day since 2018/19. Despite this rise in demand, and despite repeated pledges to boost Hospital care, the proportion of Department of Health and Social Care (DHSC) spending on primary care has fallen (8.9% in 2015/16 to 8.1% in 2021/22). In 2021/22 the largest proportion of DHSC spending, £83.1 billion, went to acute Hospitals, compared to £14.9 billion spent on primary care. The NHS has received additional funding in recent years, but while acute Hospital trusts saw 27% funding growth since 2016/17, community trusts saw just half that level of growth, at 14%. Trends in staffing reveal a similar pattern, with the number of NHS consultants growing by 18% between 2016/17 and 2021/22, but just a 4% increase in the number of GPs over the same period. There has also been a significant jump in Social Care staff vacancies rising from 110,000 vacant posts in:- 2020/21 to 152,000, and in:- 2022/23. The authors outline how patients struggling to get appointments with their GP, are at risk of their condition deteriorating and having to seek urgent help from already over-stretched acute Hospitals. In their assessment of the key reasons for this longstanding policy failure, the researchers found that progress has been hampered by an incorrect belief that moving care into the community will result in short-term cash savings. Other factors include a lack of data about Primary and Community Services leading to a:- 'cycle of invisibility,' funding flows that prioritise Hospitals, and urgent challenges such as A&E waiting times and planned care backlogs becoming the priority for politicians tempted by quick fixes instead of fundamental improvement. The King's Fund cautions that bolstering Primary and Community Care should not mean closing Hospitals, noting that England already has fewer Hospital beds per capita than other nations. Instead, the authors call for future funding to be directed into a comprehensive plan to refocus the health and care system towards Primary and Community Care. They warn that a piecemeal approach of cherry-picking policies:- 'will not miraculously unlock change.' The report proposes several steps to begin the shift. These steps are as follows:-
In response to this, Professor Martin Green OBE, Chief Executive of Care England said- "This report brings to life the consequences of the Government's continued focus on trying to fix the NHS, without fixing the Social Care sector. Care England wholeheartedly supports shifting the national focus away from Hospitals towards Primary and Community health and care. As we have repeatedly warned, acute pressures and the short-term nature of Government funding cycles dominate health and care leaders' capacity and resources. This means their scope to focus on long term outcomes such as prevention is significantly hampered. The introduction of Integrated Care Systems has not been the watershed moment we were hoping for and whilst still in their infancy, this report underscores there is still a long way to go. We must strive for a system that is able to achieve meaningful outcomes, where people can have a seamless journey across health and Social Care."
Beccy Baird, Senior Fellow at The King's Fund and lead author of the report, added:- "Like other countries, England needs to bend the curve on the predicted rise in demand for high-cost, reactive and Hospital-based care. That means supporting people to take care of their health and wellbeing, intervening early, and keeping people healthy at home for as long as possible, which can only be achieved by bolstering Primary and Community Services. While these changes may not unlock the quick-fix savings many mistakenly expect, the alternative is to build more expensive Hospitals to manage acute needs that could have been prevented or better managed in the community." COMMENTS (0)
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