logo
This 10-year plan may be the last chance to save the NHS

This 10-year plan may be the last chance to save the NHS

Independent11 hours ago

The 10-year plan for the National Health Service that Sir Keir Starmer is expected to publish in the next few days is likely to be a somewhat incoherent document. From the advance publicity, it would seem to have a lot of disconnected ideas in it, some good, some not so good and some irrelevant.
The government hopes that weight-loss drugs will offer the hope of a big advance against obesity-related illnesses – but this comes after new figures raised concerns about their safety. If large language models can speed up the development of new pharmaceuticals, so much the better. But we remain sceptical about whether supermarkets ought to be recruited into policing their customers' calorie intakes.
What will decide the success or failure of the NHS over the next decade, however, will be the design of the structural reforms to the service. Wes Streeting, the health and social care secretary, has made a good start in two respects. He has welcomed private-sector providers to help deliver NHS services free at the point of need, and he has taken an axe to the central bureaucracy of NHS England.
The test for the 10-year plan will be the extent to which it brings in further changes to incentives throughout the NHS so that it becomes responsive to patients. Sir Jim Mackey, the new chief executive of the NHS, says many of the right things. 'It feels like we've built mechanisms to keep the public away because it's an inconvenience,' he says in his first interview since taking up the post three months ago.
He says of the current NHS: 'It takes forever. It costs a fortune. We need to 'de-layer it' because it's expensive, it slows decision-making down, it de-powers people who need to make decisions.'
The sentiment is right, but again, some of his ideas seem better than others. We are not convinced that using patient satisfaction surveys to decide how much money NHS trusts receive is going to work. The evidence of reform under the last Labour government was that the mere existence of competition from private-sector providers had a dramatic effect on the performance of NHS units.
Already, there are the very early signs that the extra resources put into the NHS are bearing fruit, less than 12 months after the change of government. Luke Tryl, the opinion pollster for More in Common, reported on BBC's Newsnight on Friday that people in focus groups are starting to report positive experiences of the NHS for the first time since the pandemic. 'If there is a bright spot for the government, it's the NHS,' he said.
One of the biggest challenges for Sir Jim and Mr Streeting, however, is more political than structural. They have to send the starkest message to doctors: please do not go on strike; take responsibility; show leadership; it is up to you to make the NHS work, because if it cannot be turned round this time, then it probably is the end of this model of healthcare.
Sir Jim appears to understand this. He says that his 'big worry' is that if the NHS cannot deliver a service that is better at listening to patients – the particular example he gave was maternity care – 'we'll lose the population; if we lose the population, we've lost the NHS; for me, it's straightforward: the two things are completely dependent on each other.'
He is absolutely right. Universal healthcare free at the point of need is a noble idea, but it desperately needs Labour's reforms to work if it is to survive.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Pharmacists may be handed power to prescribe Ozempic on NHS
Pharmacists may be handed power to prescribe Ozempic on NHS

Telegraph

time29 minutes ago

  • Telegraph

Pharmacists may be handed power to prescribe Ozempic on NHS

Pharmacists could be given powers to prescribe Ozempic on the NHS under new plans to tackle Britain's obesity crisis. Wes Streeting, the Health Secretary, is looking at expanding the list of medics who are able to hand out the jab beyond GPs. The proposals will form part of a 10-year plan to boost the nation's health, which will be unveiled by Sir Keir Starmer on Thursday. Under the plans, the role of pharmacies in treating more minor conditions will be ramped up to make them a 'major player on NHS front line'. They will be given extra powers to help more patients who are suffering from issues like obesity, asthma, high blood pressure and diabetes. Mr Streeting said: 'I'm determined to get the care you need as close as possible to your home and, as pillars of our communities, pharmacies will play a vital role. 'The nation's high streets will join the front line of NHS care, as pharmacists get far more power to prescribe and manage a range of health conditions. Our Plan for Change will give patients greater choice and access to the right care, so your healthcare fits around your life – not the other way round.' Officials confirmed that, as part of the plans, they are exploring giving high street pharmacists the power to prescribe Ozempic over the counter. Ozempic, and a number of other similar products in its class, can currently only be given out on the NHS by a GP or a hospital clinician. This month, the health service announced that it would start prescribing Mounjaro, another weight-loss drug, for free to severe obesity sufferers. Around 250,000 people with a BMI of 40 or over and at least four conditions relating to obesity, including high blood pressure or heart disease, will benefit. Britons can also buy Ozempic from licensed online pharmacies, which have prescribing powers, but it typically costs around £200 a month. Originally designed as a treatment for Type 2 diabetes, it has exploded in popularity recently after being adopted by celebrities and politicians. However, some former users have warned people against taking the jabs because of the side-effects, which can include nausea and vomiting. Under the new plans, pharmacists will also be encouraged to help obesity sufferers by offering them dietary counselling and lifestyle advice. Treating obesity costs the NHS around £11 billion a year and rising, which Mr Streeting has warned risks making the health service 'unsustainable'. Rates have doubled since the 1990s, including amongst the young, with more than one in five children now obese by the time they leave primary school. £215 million is wasted every year The Health Secretary is leading a push to divert patients with less serious conditions away from GP surgeries and hospitals to alleviate pressure on the NHS. High street pharmacies will have their role in delivering vaccination programmes and screening for risk of cardiovascular disease expanded. National Pharmacy Association research, released on Sunday, found that six million hours of A&E time could be saved every year by redirecting people. It said 325,000 people attended a hospital in 2023-24 with a sore throat or cold, 18,000 with insect bites and 196,000 with urinary tract infections. The NPA has estimated that £215 million is wasted every year treating patients in A&E when they could have attended a pharmacy instead. Ministers also plan to roll out the introduction of medicine-dispensing robots in high streets to free up pharmacists to spend more time with patients. Such robots are used in Singapore, which Mr Streeting visited last year on a fact-finding mission about the use of technology in health services.

Supermarkets told to cut 100 calories from shoppers' baskets
Supermarkets told to cut 100 calories from shoppers' baskets

Telegraph

time44 minutes ago

  • Telegraph

Supermarkets told to cut 100 calories from shoppers' baskets

Supermarkets will be ordered to cut up to 100 calories from the average shopping basket under a new 'nanny state' drive to tackle obesity. Ministers are set to impose a 'healthy food standard' that will force stores to curtail sales of sugary and salty snacks in favour of more fruit and vegetables. Shops failing to meet the mandatory targets could face fines, which retail sources warned could see prices rise. The measures will form the backbone of a 10-year plan to improve the nation's health, which will be unveiled by Wes Streeting, the Health Secretary, this week. Downing Street hopes the changes can help avert the need for future tax rises by slashing the £11 billion a year that obesity costs the NHS. But senior retail figures said they had been blindsided by the 'draconian' plans, which they said would add to a growing glut of red tape on business. One called the proposals a 'nanny state' policy, while another industry source warned that the measures were being 'propelled by food propagandists' who did not believe in people taking responsibility for their own diets. Andrew Griffith, the shadow business secretary, said: 'Labour want the nanny state sitting in every supermarket trolley. 'You'd have thought they'd be too busy with their policy U-turns or trying to fix the economy that Reeves broke with her tax rises – but no – it sounds like the miserable socialists have their sights on every small treat in our weekly shop.' The exact target will be agreed in talks with major retailers, but ministers are expected to push for it to be set at around 100 calories per basket – the equivalent of two cubes of butter. It will be underpinned by a new regime of mandatory reporting, meaning large shops have to submit data on how much of each product they sell. Under the proposals, it will be left up to supermarkets to decide how they meet the requirements. Retailers could change the recipes of own-brand products, target discount offers or award shoppers more loyalty points for choosing healthier options. Mr Streeting warned that, without taking action, the growing cost of obesity-related care risked making the NHS 'unsustainable' in the near future. 'Obesity has doubled since the 1990s and costs our NHS £11 billion a year – triple the budget for ambulance services,' said the Health Secretary. 'Unless we curb the rising tide of cost and demand, the NHS risks becoming unsustainable. 'Through our new healthy food standard, we will make the healthy choice the easy choice, because prevention is better than cure. By shifting from sickness to prevention, we will make sure the NHS can be there for us when we need it.' Announcing the new policy, the Government cited research estimating that cutting the average person's intake by just 50 calories a day would lift 340,000 children and two million adults out of obesity. However, experts questioned the claim. Tom Sanders, professor emeritus of nutrition and dietetics at King's College London, said it was 'not a view that most experts in nutrition would share'. He added: ' Tackling obesity can only be effective if it changes the obesogenic environment, which is characterised by sedentary behaviour and over-exposure to high-calorie food.' Sir Keir Starmer will unveil the plans on Thursday after tense negotiations with supermarket bosses over the details went down to the wire. The Telegraph has been told that late on Friday officials were scrambling to drum up support for the policy after a fierce backlash. During the talks, retail giants warned that they would oppose any measures that would hit their profit margins, which are very tight. Shops already face significant regulation over unhealthy food, including being required to move products with high salt and sugar away from the front of stores. Supermarket chiefs are understood to privately be concerned that further regulation would force them to raise prices in stores and pause new openings. One senior industry figure said there was no evidence that such 'draconian regulation' had helped tackle obesity, adding: 'Proponents now want to go further.' The insider claimed the agenda was 'propelled by food propagandists' who wanted a crackdown on ultra-processed products such as sliced bread, crisps, biscuits, and ham. Another source questioned why ministers were focusing solely on supermarkets rather than also including takeaway chains and high street bakeries. But officials said that by introducing a 'level playing field' where all businesses faced the same terms, they would avoid creating a 'first mover advantage'. However, Tesco and Sainsbury's, two of the country's biggest chains, said they welcomed the proposals. Health campaigners also backed the move, saying that improving people's diets would help cut rates of killer conditions such as heart disease and cancer. Allies said the Health Secretary was acutely aware of the cost of living crisis and had rejected ideas that would have pushed up costs for shoppers, having blocked more radical proposals such as banning buy one, get one free promotions or introducing new 'sin taxes' on sugary and salty goods. The 10-year strategy will also include plans to expand the use of pharmacies to treat conditions such as obesity, asthma, high blood pressure and diabetes. They will be handed greater powers to prescribe drugs and encouraged to offer people advice on lifestyle changes and nutrition. The changes form part of a wider drive to cut the burden of people attending GP surgeries and A&E units for relatively minor complaints. Research by the National Pharmacy Association found that six million hours of A&E time could be saved every year by redirecting patients. It said 325,000 people had attended a hospital in 2023-24 with a sore throat or cold, whilst 18,000 went for treatment for insect bites. Mr Streeting said: 'The nation's high streets will join the front line of NHS care, as pharmacists get far more power to prescribe and manage a range of health conditions.'

Add health warning to ‘addictive' National Lottery, says charity
Add health warning to ‘addictive' National Lottery, says charity

Telegraph

time44 minutes ago

  • Telegraph

Add health warning to ‘addictive' National Lottery, says charity

The National Lottery should carry health warnings amid growing evidence that it is a gateway to problem gambling and addiction, ministers have been told. Children are being increasingly lured into playing the lottery through marketing gimmicks including chocolate-scented scratch-and-sniff cards, Christmas scratchcards that double as gift tags, and even musical scratchcards, according to a major report published on Sunday. GambleAware, the biggest charity helping problem gamblers, said this marketing, seen by as many as two in five children, normalised betting as an 'everyday activity' that was harmless and enjoyable. However, the charity said there was an established research link between exposure to gambling and the 'risk of experiencing harm later in life'. Addicts are more likely to play the lottery than any other betting game, it found, with an estimated 600,000 problem gamblers among the 30 per cent of the population who buy at least one National Lottery product every week. These problem gamblers account for 3.9 per cent of people who buy a ticket, rising to 7.7 per cent of those using scratchcards and 8.2 per cent of those playing instant win games. GambleAware said the proportion of addicts playing the lottery was a key reason for it to carry health warnings and point people to gambling support services. A survey of 18,000 adults found 74 per cent believed the National Lottery should point people to support for gambling harm on its products. More than eight in 10 agreed it was a form of gambling, while 46 per cent rejected the idea that it was harmless. 'I spent food money on scratch cards' One survey respondent said: 'I registered on the National Lottery app, and I got a bit of a habit with the instant scratchcards on there because they make it so easy for you to play... it did lead me into financial difficulty. I wasn't able to buy food for about a week because I'd spent the food shopping money on scratch cards.' GambleAware said health warnings and 'safer gambling measures' were one of the most powerful ways to raise awareness of the health risks of betting. 'This intervention is especially important to rebalance gambling exposure to children and young people. Children report a high level of exposure to gambling adverts but are less likely to recall health messaging on them,' it said. 'This shows that health-related messages need to be more commonly used by operators, and more prominent when used.' Similar policies are already implemented in other European countries including France, it added. GambleAware has devised health warnings, which have already been tested in research, such as 'Gambling comes at a cost', 'Gambling can be addictive' and 'Gambling can grip anyone'. Andy Boucher, the GambleAware chairman of trustees, said: 'In the public's mind, the National Lottery is there to do good in the community, and so we believe it is also the right thing for it to look after the people who play it. 'Allwyn, the National Lottery's current operator, has previously stated that 'player safety is our top priority' - it must live up to those words and play a critical role in protecting people from gambling harms.'

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store