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National Health Service

The National Health Service (NHS) is the umbrella term for the publicly funded healthcare systems of the United Kingdom (UK). Since 1948, they have been funded out of general taxation. There are three systems which are referred to using the "NHS" name (NHS England, NHS Scotland and NHS Wales). Health and Social Care in Northern Ireland was created separately[2] and is often locally referred to as "the NHS". The four systems were established in 1948 as part of major social reforms following the Second World War. The founding principles were that services should be comprehensive, universal and free at the point of delivery—a health service based on clinical need, not ability to pay.[3] Each service provides a comprehensive range of health services, free at the point of use for people ordinarily resident in the United Kingdom apart from dental treatment and optical care.[4] In England, NHS patients have to pay prescription charges; some, such as those aged over 60 and certain state benefit recipients, are exempt.[5]

Logos of the
National Health Service
Logo of NHS Scotland
Logo of NHS Wales

Taken together, the four National Health Services in 2015–16 employed around 1.6 million people with a combined budget of £136.7 billion.[6] In 2014, the total health sector workforce across the United Kingdom was 2,165,043. This broke down into 1,789,586 in England, 198,368 in Scotland, 110,292 in Wales and 66,797 in Northern Ireland.[7] In 2017, there were 691,000 nurses registered in the United Kingdom, down 1,783 from the previous year. However, this is the first time nursing numbers have fallen since 2008. Every 24 hours it sees one million patients, and with 1.7 million staff it is the fifth biggest employer in the world,[8] as well as the largest non-military public organisation in the world.[9]

When purchasing drugs, the four healthcare services have significant market power that, based on their own assessment of the fair value of the drugs, influences the global price, typically keeping prices lower.[10] A small number of products are procured jointly by two or more UK healthcare services.[11] Several other countries either copy the United Kingdom’s model or directly rely on Britain’s assessments for their own decisions on state-financed drug reimbursements.[12]

History

 
Aneurin Bevan, the founder of the NHS[13]

Calls for a "unified medical service" can be dated back to the Minority Report of the Royal Commission on the Poor Law in 1909.[14]

Somerville Hastings, President of the Socialist Medical Association, successfully proposed a resolution at the 1934 Labour Party Conference that the party should be committed to the establishment of a State Health Service.[15]

Following the 1942 Beveridge Report's recommendation to create "comprehensive health and rehabilitation services for prevention and cure of disease", cross-party consensus emerged on introducing a National Health Service of some description.[16] Conservative MP and Health Minister, Henry Willink later advanced this notion of a National Health Service in 1944 with his consultative White Paper "A National Health Service" which was circulated in full and short versions to colleagues, as well as in newsreel.[17]

When Clement Attlee's Labour Party won the 1945 election he appointed Aneurin Bevan as Health Minister. Bevan then embarked upon what the official historian of the NHS, Charles Webster, called an "audacious campaign" to take charge of the form the NHS finally took.[18] Bevan's National Health Service was proposed in Westminster legislation for England and Wales from 1946 and Scotland from 1947, and the Northern Ireland Parliament's Public Health Services Act 1947.[19]NHS Wales was split from NHS (England) in 1969 when control was passed to the Secretary of State for Wales.[20] According to one history of the NHS, "In some respects the war had made things easier. In anticipation of massive air raid casualties, the Emergency Medical Service had brought the country’s municipal and voluntary hospitals into one umbrella organisation, showing that a national hospital service was possible."[21] Webster wrote in 2002 that "the Luftwaffe achieved in months what had defeated politicians and planners for at least two decades."[22]

The NHS was born out of the ideal that healthcare should be available to all, regardless of wealth. Although being freely accessible regardless of wealth maintained Henry Willink's principle of free healthcare for all, Conservative MPs were in favour of maintaining local administration of the NHS through existing arrangements with local authorities fearing that an NHS which owned hospitals on a national scale would lose the personal relationship between doctor and patient.[23]

Conservative MPs voted in favour of their amendment to Bevan's Bill to maintain local control and ownership of hospitals and against Bevan's plan for national ownership of all hospitals. The Labour government defeated Conservative amendments and went ahead with the NHS as it remains today; a single large national organisation (with devolved equivalents) which forced the transfer of ownership of hospitals from local authorities and charities to the new NHS. Bevan's principle of ownership with no private sector involvement has since been diluted, with later Labour governments implementing large scale financing arrangements with private builders in private finance initiatives and joint ventures.[24]

At its launch by Bevan on 5 July 1948 it had at its heart three core principles: That it meet the needs of everyone, that it be free at the point of delivery, and that it be based on clinical need, not ability to pay.[25]

Three years after the founding of the NHS, Bevan resigned from the Labour government in opposition to the introduction of charges for the provision of dentures, dentists,[26] and glasses; resigning in support was fellow minister and future Prime Minister Harold Wilson.[27] The following year, Winston Churchill's Conservative government introduced prescription fees. However, Wilson's government abolished them in 1965; they were later re-introduced but with exemptions for those on low income.[28] These charges were the first of many controversies over changes to the NHS throughout its history.[29]

From its earliest days, the cultural history of the NHS has shown its place in British society reflected and debated in film, TV, cartoons and literature. The NHS had a prominent slot during the 2012 London Summer Olympics opening ceremony directed by Danny Boyle, being described as "the institution which more than any other unites our nation".[30]

Eligibility for treatment

Everyone living in the UK can use the NHS without being asked to pay the full cost of the service, though NHS dentistry and optometry do have standard charges in each of the four national health services in the UK.[31] In addition, most patients in England have to pay charges for prescriptions though some patients are exempted.[5]

Aneurin Bevan, in considering the provision of NHS services to overseas visitors wrote, in 1952, that it would be "unwise as well as mean to withhold the free service from the visitor to Britain. How do we distinguish a visitor from anybody else? Are British citizens to carry means of identification everywhere to prove that they are not visitors? For if the sheep are to be separated from the goats both must be classified. What began as an attempt to keep the Health Service for ourselves would end by being a nuisance to everybody."[32]

The provision of free treatment to non-UK-residents, formerly interpreted liberally, has been increasingly restricted, with new overseas visitor hospital charging regulations introduced in 2015.[33]

Citizens of the EU holding a valid European Health Insurance Card and persons from certain other countries with which the UK has reciprocal arrangements concerning health care can get emergency treatment without charge.[34]

The NHS is free at the point of use, for general practitioner (GP) and emergency treatment not including admission to hospital, to non-residents.[35] People with the right to medical care in European Economic Area (EEA) nations are also entitled to free treatment by using the European Health Insurance Card. Those from other countries with which the UK has reciprocal arrangements also qualify for free treatment.[36][37] Since 6 April 2015, non-EEA nationals who are subject to immigration control must have the immigration status of indefinite leave to remain at the time of treatment and be properly settled, to be considered ordinarily resident. People not ordinarily resident in the UK are in general not entitled to free hospital treatment, with some exceptions such as refugees.[4][38]

People not ordinarily resident may be subject to an interview to establish their eligibility, which must be resolved before non-emergency treatment can commence. Patients who do not qualify for free treatment are asked to pay in advance or to sign a written undertaking to pay, except for emergency treatment.

People from outside the EEA coming to the UK for a temporary stay of more than six months are required to pay an immigration health surcharge at the time of visa application, and will then be entitled to NHS treatment on the same basis as a resident. This includes overseas students with a visa to study at a recognised institution for 6 months or more, but not visitors on a tourist visa.[39] In 2016 the surcharge was £200 per year, with exemptions and reductions in some cases.[40] This was increased to £400 in 2018. The discounted rate for students and those on the Youth Mobility Scheme will increase from £150 to £300.[41]

From 15 January 2007, anyone who is working outside the UK as a missionary for an organisation with its principal place of business in the UK is fully exempt from NHS charges for services that would normally be provided free of charge to those resident in the UK. This is regardless of whether they derive a salary or wage from the organisation, or receive any type of funding or assistance from the organisation for the purposes of working overseas.[42] This is in recognition of the fact that most missionaries would be unable to afford private health care and those working in developing countries should not effectively be penalised for their contribution to development and other work.

Those who are not ordinarily resident (including British citizens who may have paid National Insurance contributions in the past) are liable to charges for services.

There are some other categories of people who are exempt from the residence requirements such as specific government workers and those in the armed forces stationed overseas.

Historical issues

The trade union, Unite, said back in early 2019 that the NHS had been under pressure as a result of economic austerity.[43] A 2018 public survey reported that public satisfaction with the NHS has fallen from 70% in 2010 to 53% in 2018.[44] The NHS is consistently ranked as the institution that makes people proudest to be British, beating the Royal family, Armed Forces and the BBC.[45] One 2019 survey ranked nurses and doctors - not necessarily NHS staff - amongst the most trustworthy professions in the UK.[46]

Funding

 
NHS Spending [1948/49–2014/15][47]

The systems are 98.8% funded from general taxation and National Insurance contributions, plus small amounts from patient charges for some services.[48][49] About 10% of GDP is spent on health and most is spent in the public sector.[50] The money to pay for the NHS comes directly from taxation. The 2008/09 budget roughly equates to a contribution of £1,980 per person in the UK.[51]

When the NHS was launched in 1948 it had a budget of £437 million[52] (equivalent to £16.91 billion in 2021). In 2016–2017, the budget was £122.5 billion.[53] In 1955/56 health spending was 11.2% of the public services budget. In 2015/16 it was 29.7%.[54] This equates to an average rise in spending over the full 60-year period of about 4% a year once inflation has been taken into account. Under the Blair government spending levels increased by around 6% a year on average. Since 2010 spending growth has been constrained to just over 1% a year.[54]

Some 60% of the NHS budget is used to pay staff. A further 20% pays for drugs and other supplies, with the remaining 20% split between buildings, equipment, training costs, medical equipment, catering and cleaning. Nearly 80% of the total budget is distributed by local trusts in line with the particular health priorities in their areas.[55] Since 2010, there has been a cap of 1% on pay rises for staff continuing in the same role. Unions representing doctors, dentists, nurses and other health professionals have called on the government to end the cap on health service pay, claiming the cap is damaging the health service and damaging patient care.[56] The pay rise is likely to be below the level of inflation and to mean a real-terms pay cut.[57] The House of Commons Library did research showing that real-terms NHS funding per head was to fall in 2018–19, and stay the same for two years afterwards.[58]

There appears to be support for higher taxation to pay for extra spending on the NHS as an opinion poll in 2016 showed that 70% of people were willing to pay an extra penny in the pound in income tax if the money were ringfenced and guaranteed for the NHS.[59] Two thirds of respondents to a King's Fund poll favour increased taxation to help finance the NHS.[60]

The Guardian has said that GPs face excessive workloads throughout Britain and that this puts the GP's health and that of their patients at risk.[61] The Royal College of Physicians surveyed doctors across the UK, with two-thirds maintaining patient safety had deteriorated during the year to 2018: 80% feared they would be unable to provide safe patient care in the coming year while 84% felt increased pressure on the NHS was demoralising the workforce. Jane Dacre said, "We simply cannot go through this [a winter when the NHS is badly overstretched] again. It is not as if the situation was either new or unexpected. As the NHS reaches 70, our patients deserve better. Somehow, we need to move faster towards a better resourced, adequately staffed NHS during 2018 or it will happen again."[62] At a time when the NHS is short of doctors foreign doctors are forced to leave the UK due to visa restrictions.[63] A study found that a fifth of doctors had faced bullying from seniors in the previous year due to pressure at work.[64]

The NHS is under-resourced compared to health provisions in other developed nations. A King’s Fund study of OECD data from 21 nations, revealed that the NHS has among the lowest numbers of doctors, nurses and hospital beds per capita in the western world.[65] Nurses within the NHS maintain that patient care is compromised by the shortage of nurses and the lack of experienced nurses with the necessary qualifications.[66] According to a YouGov poll, 74% of the UK public believes there are too few nurses.[67] The NHS performs below average in preventing deaths from cancer, strokes and heart disease.[68] Staff shortages at histology departments are delaying diagnosis and start of treatment for cancer patients.[69] In England and Scotland cancer wards and children's wards have to close because the hospital cannot attract sufficient qualified doctors and nurses to run the wards safely. Cancer patients and child patients are having to travel very long distances to get treatment and their relatives must travel far to visit the patients. In wards which have not closed staff sometimes work under stress due to staff shortages. Brexit is likely to aggravate these problems.[70] Due to the shortage of nurses the NHS is relying on less qualified staff like healthcare assistants and nursing associates.[71]

Cancer survival rates in the UK have been rising fast but probably still lag behind the best results internationally, mainly because of late diagnosis.[72] However death rates from breast cancer are falling faster in Britain than in any other of the six largest countries in Europe, and are estimated now to have improved beyond the European average.[73][74] According to Breast Cancer Care 72% of NHS trusts across the UK do not provide dedicated specialist nurses for patients with incurable breast cancer."[75][72] Cancer Research UK maintains more NHS cancer personnel are needed to enable the UK to catch up The NHS in England is expanding early diagnosis services with the goal of increasing the proportion of cancers diagnosed early (at stages 1 and 2) from 53% to 75% in the decade to 2028.[76] The NHS was the first health service in Europe to negotiate coverage for novel CAR-T cancer therapy, with agreement reached within 10 days of its European marketing authorisation.[77]

In 2018, British Prime Minister Theresa May announced that NHS in England would receive a 3.4% increase in funding every year to 2024, which would allow it to receive an extra £20bn a year in real terms funding.[78] There is concern that a high proportion of this money will go to service NHS debts rather than for improved patient care. There are calls for the government to write off the NHS debt. Saffron Cordery of NHS Providers said that hospitals needed help to do their work without being up in deficit, as two-thirds were in the year to 2018.[79] Some expressed doubt over whether May could carry out this proposed increase in funding.[80] The next day, Health Secretary Jeremy Hunt backed the extra £20bn annual increase in NHS funding and responded to criticism by stating that taxation would be used to carry out the funding and that details would be revealed when the next budget is unveiled in November.[78][81]

The Institute for Fiscal Studies has stated a 5% real-terms increase was needed for real change. Paul Johnson of the IFS said the 3.4% was greater than recent increases, but less than the long-term average.[82] Health experts maintain the money will "help stem further decline in the health service, but it's simply not enough to address the fundamental challenges facing the NHS, or fund essential improvements to services that are flagging."[83] Inflation may erode the real value of this funding increase.[84]

As part of the 2018 funding increase the UK Government asked the NHS in England to produce a 10-year plan as to how this funding would be used. On 7 January 2019, the NHS England published the NHS Long Term Plan.

In March 2022 Rishi Sunak doubled the annual efficiency target for the NHS in England. The 2.2 per cent target would deliver annual savings of saving of £4.75 billion. At the same time the additional covid funding is being removed in 2022-23.[85] At the same time Sir Charles Bean, recently leader of the Office for Budget Responsibility pointed out that "the rising trend in health and social care spending and pensions will be adding something like another £75 billion spending over the next five years, £150 billion, potentially over the next decade" as if treatments are available to keep people alive longer, then people will want them.[86]

Staffing

 
EU workers joining and leaving the NHS in England, annual variation in absolute numbers (2012–2017)[87]
  Joiner
  Leaver

The United Kingdom's exit from the European Union will affect physicians from EU countries, about 11% of the physician workforce.[88] A survey suggested 60% of these physicians were considering leaving.[89] Record numbers of EU nationals (17,197 EU staff working in the NHS which include nurses and doctors) left in 2016. The figures, put together by NHS Digital, led to calls to reassure European workers over their future in the UK.[90]

In June 2018, the Royal College of Physicians calculated that medical training places need to be increased from 7,500 to 15,000 by 2030 to take account of part-time working among other factors. At that time there were 47,800 consultants working in the UK of which 15,700 were physicians. About 20% of consultants work less than full-time.[91]

A study by the Centre for Progressive Policy called for NHS trusts to become “exemplar employers” by improving social mobility and pay especially for those "trusts in poorer places where they can play a particularly large role in determining the economic wellbeing of the local population.” They found the NHS to be " a middle ranking employer in comparison to other large organisations and falls short on social mobility and the real Living Wage", and ranked trusts using a ‘good employer index’. Ambulance trusts were ranked worst.[92]

In September 2021 the Daily Telegraph carried a story saying that "nearly half of all NHS staff have no medical qualifications", being managers, administrators or unqualified assistants.[93]

On 6 June 2022, the Guardian said that a survey of more than 20,000 frontline staff by the nurses' trade union and professional body,[94] the Royal College of Nursing, said that only a quarter of shifts had the planned number of registered nurses on duty. The Guardian said that the union's general secretary, in her keynote speech at their annual congress in Glasgow, was expected to say that large numbers of nurses are leaving the profession because they are demoralised and overworked, and that they had concerns over patient safety.[95]

The NHS is facing a shortage of general practitioners. From 2015 to 2022, the number of GPs has fallen by 1,622. Some family doctors have 2,500 patients each, forcing patients to attend A&E instead. Certain regions have fewer than 50 GPs per 100,000 people, while other regions have more than 70, presenting a challenge to the NHS's founding principle of equal treatment. A growing number of family doctors are reporting unsustainable workloads, and many have chosen to work part-time. A Health and Social Care spokesperson said that the department is making 4,000 training positions available for GPs every year, which help create an extra 50 million appointments annually.[96]

British exit from the European Union

There is concern that a disorderly Brexit may compromise patients' access to vital medicines. In February 2018 many medical organisations were planning for a worst-case Brexit scenario because "time is running out" for a transition deal to follow the UK’s formal exit, scheduled for March 2019.[97] Pharmaceutical organisations working with the Civil Service to keep medicine supplies available in the case of a no-deal Brexit had to sign 26 Non-Disclosure Agreements (NDAs) to prevent them from giving the public information. The figures were given on 21 December 2018 after Rushanara Ali asked a parliamentary question. Ali said, "It is utterly unacceptable for the government to use non-disclosure agreements with pharmaceutical businesses and trade associations. By effectively ‘gagging’ these organisations, these secretive agreements are preventing essential information from being shared, are undermining transparency and are hampering businesses’ ability to speak out."[98] As negotiations continue between the UK and the EU as of 1 January 2021, vulnerable people needing treatment when working, living or travelling to the UK may lose out by not having access to NHS Care.[99]

Rising social care costs

Social care will cost more in future according to research by Liverpool University, University College London, and others and higher investment are needed. Professor Helen Stokes-Lampard of the Royal College of GPs said, “It’s a great testament to medical research, and the NHS, that we are living longer – but we need to ensure that our patients are living longer with a good quality of life. For this to happen we need a properly funded, properly staffed health and social care sector with general practice, hospitals and social care all working together – and all communicating well with each other, in the best interests of delivering safe care to all our patients.”[100]

Mental health

Some patients have to wait excessively long for mental health care. The Royal College of Psychiatrists found some must wait up to thirteen months for the right care. Wendy Burn of the Royal College of Psychiatrists said, “It is a scandal that patients are waiting so long for treatment. The failure to give people with mental illnesses the prompt help they need is ruining their lives.” Even patients who are suicidal or who have attempted suicide are sometimes denied treatment; patients are told they are not ill enough or waiting lists are too long. During very long waits for treatment, one in three patients deteriorate, and they may become unemployed or get divorced. One in four patients throughout the UK wait over three months to see an NHS mental health professional, with 6% waiting at least a year.[101]

The National Audit Office found mental health provisions for children and young people will not meet growing demand, despite promises of increased funding. Even if promises to provide £1.4bn more for the sector are kept, there will be “significant unmet need” due to staff shortages, inadequate data and failure to control spending by NHS clinical commissioning groups. Currently one-quarter of young people needing mental health services can get NHS help. The Department of Health and Social Care hopes to raise the ratio to 35%. Efforts to improve mental health provisions could reveal previously unmet demand.[102]

Meg Hillier of the select committee on public accounts said: "The government currently estimates that less than a third of children and young people with a diagnosable mental health condition are receiving treatment. But the government doesn’t understand how many children and young people are in need of treatment or how funding is being spent locally. The government urgently needs to set out how departments, and national and local bodies, are going to work together to achieve its long-term ambition.” Amyas Morse said, “Current targets to improve care are modest and even if met would still mean two-thirds of those who need help are not seen. Rising estimates of demand may indicate that the government is even further away than it thought."[102]

In response, NHS England has embarked on a major programme to expand mental health services, whose budgets are now growing faster than the NHS overall.[103] MIND the mental health charity responded saying: "We are pleased that the plan includes a commitment of £2.3bn a year towards mental health, to help redress the balance. The plan promises that this money will see around two million more people with anxiety, depression and other mental health problems receive help, including new parents, and 24 hour access to crisis care. The plan also includes a guarantee that investment in primary, community and mental health care will grow faster than the growing overall NHS budget so that different parts of the NHS come together to provide better, joined-up care in partnership with local government. Since the funding announcement in the summer, Mind has been working with the NHS, Government and voluntary sector to help shape the long term plan. This longer-term strategy was developed in consultation with people with mental health problems to ensure their views are reflected."[103]

Medicines

In November 2019 unprecedented shortages of medicines patients needed developed. Drugs to treat cancer, heart disease, Parkinson's disease, mental health conditions, some eye conditions, antibiotics for tuberculosis and drugs to control epilepsy are among those in short supply. Life saving drugs will have to be rationed and not all patients who need them will get them. Some patients can be switched onto other drugs, though this may increase the workload of hard-pressed medical staff; other patients cannot be switched to alternative drugs. Many problems can impact the supply chain, like IT failure, speculators stockpiling drugs, alterations in regulation and sudden disease outbreaks. Tony O’Sullivan of Keep Our NHS Public said: "The Health Department’s guidance includes an unprecedented list of drugs unavailable or in short supply. Patients and clinicians alike should be on high alert when the advice includes how to ‘share stocks’ to make them last, to ‘prioritise’ patients already on specific treatments including cancer rather than a new patient and effectively how to ration so many vital drugs. Drug companies’ behaviour must be controlled. We must urgently protect the NHS from further risks of loss of control of drug prices and supplies from trade deals with the US and that requires returning it to a wholly public service."[104][105]

Performance

Performance of the NHS is generally assessed separately at the level of England, Wales, Scotland and Northern Ireland. Since 2004 the Commonwealth Fund has produced surveys, "Mirror, Mirror on the Wall", comparing the performance of health systems in 11 wealthy countries in which the UK generally ranks highly. In the 2021 survey the NHS dropped from first overall to fourth as it had fallen in key areas, including ‘access to care and equity.’[106] The Euro Health Consumer Index attempted to rank the NHS against other European health systems from 2014 to 2018. Civitas produced an International Health Care Outcomes Index in 2022 ranking the performance of the UK health care system against 18 similar, wealthy countries since 2000. It excluded the impact of the Covid-19 pandemic as data stopped in 2019. The UK was near the bottom of most tables except households who faced catastrophic health spending.[107]

A comparative analysis of health care systems in 2010 put the NHS second in a study of seven rich countries.[108][109] The report put the UK health systems above those of Germany, Canada and the US; the NHS was deemed the most efficient among those health systems studied.

A 2018 study by the King's Fund, Health Foundation, Nuffield Trust, and the Institute for Fiscal Studies to mark the NHS 70th anniversary concluded that the main weakness of the NHS was healthcare outcomes. Mortality for cancer, heart attacks and stroke, was higher than average among comparable countries. The NHS was doing well at protecting people from heavy financial costs when ill. Waiting times were about the same, and the management of longterm illness was better than in other comparable countries. Efficiency was good, with low administrative costs and high use of cheaper generic medicines.[110] Twenty-nine hospital trusts and boards out of 157 had not met any waiting-time target in the year 2017–2018.[111] The Office for National Statistics reported in January 2019 that productivity in the English NHS had been growing at 3%, considerably faster than across the rest of the UK economy.[112]

In 2019, The Times, commenting on a study in the British Medical Journal, reported that "Britain spent the least on health, £3,000 per person, compared with an average of £4,400, and had the highest number of deaths that might have been prevented with prompt treatment". The BMJ study compared "the healthcare systems of other developed countries in spending, staff numbers and avoidable deaths".[113]

Over 130,000 deaths since 2012 in the UK could have been prevented if progress in public health policy had not stopped due to austerity, analysis by the Institute for Public Policy Research found. Dean Hochlaf of the IPPR said: "We have seen progress in reducing preventable disease flatline since 2012."".[114] The key NHS performance indicators (18 weeks (RTT), 4 hours (A&E) and cancer (2 week wait) have not been achieved since February 2016, July 2015 and December 2015 respectively.[115]

Civitas published an International Health Care Outcomes Index in April 2022 comparing health care outcomes in global health systems across 19 comparable countries. It considered health spending, life expectancy, major disease outcomes and outcomes for treatable mortality and childbirth. Across 16 metrics with data to 2019 (or most recent available), the UK ranked at the bottom four times (stroke, heart attack and colon cancer survival), and in the bottom three eight times. No other comparable country had such a poor record. It was the best performer for one metric – the avoidance of diabetic limb amputations.[116]

A ranking of individual hospitals around the world, published by Newsweek in March 2022, no NHS hospital was listed within the top 40. St Thomas' Hospital was ranked at 41, followed by University College Hospital at 54, and Addenbrooke's Hospital at 79.[117]

Overall satisfaction with the NHS in 2021 fell, more sharply in Scotland than in England, 17 points to 36% – the lowest level since 1997 according to the British Social Attitudes Survey. Dissatisfaction with hospital and GP waiting times were the biggest cause of the fall.[118]

The NHS Confederation polled 182 health leaders and 9 in 10 warned that inadequate capital funding harmed their “ability to meet safety requirements for patients” in health settings including hospitals, ambulance, community and mental health services and GP practices.[119]

See also Health system#Health systems performance

Role in combating coronavirus pandemic

In 2020, the NHS issued medical advice in combating COVID-19 and partnered with tech companies to create computer dashboards to help combat the nation's coronavirus pandemic.[120][121] During the pandemic, the NHS also established integrated COVID into its 1-1-1 service line as well.[122] Following his discharge from the St. Thomas' Hospital in London on 13 April 2020 after being diagnosed with COVID-19, British Prime Minister Boris Johnson described NHS medical care as "astonishing" and said that the "NHS saved my life. No question."[123][124] In this time, the NHS underwent major re-organisation to prepare for the COVID-19 pandemic.[125]

On the 5 July 2021, Queen Elizabeth II awarded the NHS the George Cross.[126] The George Cross, the highest award for gallantry available to civilians and is slightly lower in stature to the Victoria Cross, is bestowed for acts of the greatest heroism or most conspicuous courage. In a handwritten note the Queen said the award was being made to all NHS staff past and present for their “courage, compassion and dedication” throughout the pandemic.[127]

Hospital beds

In 2015, the UK had 2.6 hospital beds per 1,000 people.[128] In September 2017, the King's Fund documented the number of NHS hospital beds in England as 142,000, describing this as less than 50% of the number 30 years previously.[129] In 2019 one tenth of the beds in the UK were occupied by a patient who was alcohol-dependent.[130]

NHS music releases

NHS charity songs under various choir names have become a tradition (usually at Christmas time but not necessarily) and various formation carrying the name of NHS have released singles including:

See also

General

Notes

  1. ^ Sometimes used as a UK-wide logo for unofficial purposes. The three other national health services in the UK outside England have their own logos and names.

References

  1. ^ "NHS Identity Guidelines | NHS logo". www.england.nhs.uk. Retrieved 11 November 2021.
  2. ^ "Health funding in Northern Ireland – Northern Ireland Affairs Committee – House of Commons".
  3. ^ Choices, NHS. "The principles and values of the NHS in England". www.nhs.uk. Retrieved 23 November 2016.
  4. ^ a b "NHS entitlements: migrant health guide – Detailed guidance". UK Government. Retrieved 6 June 2016.
  5. ^ a b "Who can get free prescriptions". NHS. 9 November 2020. Retrieved 5 January 2022.
  6. ^ "10 truths about Britain's health service". Guardian. 18 January 2016. Retrieved 19 January 2016.
  7. ^ Cowper, Andy (23 May 2016). "Visible and valued: the way forward for the NHS's hidden army". Health Service Journal. Retrieved 28 July 2016.
  8. ^ Triggle, Nick (24 May 2018). "10 charts that show why the NHS is in trouble". Retrieved 6 October 2019.
  9. ^ Tombs, Robert (2014). The English and Their History. Vintage Books. p. 864.
  10. ^ "The UK has much to fear from a US trade agreement". www.newstatesman.com. 3 June 2019. Retrieved 5 June 2019.
  11. ^ "An overview of NHS Procurement of Medicines and Pharmaceutical Products and Services for acute care in the United Kingdom" (PDF). www.sps.nhs.uk/. Retrieved 24 May 2021.
  12. ^ "US takes aim at the UK's National Health Service". POLITICO. 4 June 2019. Retrieved 5 June 2019.
  13. ^ Thomas-Symonds, Nick (3 July 2018). "70 years of the NHS: How Aneurin Bevan created our beloved health service". The Independent. Archived from the original on 18 June 2022. Retrieved 5 July 2018.
  14. ^ Brian Abel-Smith, The Hospitals 1800–1948 (London, 1964), p. 229.
  15. ^ "Health Service debate". Labour Party. October 1934. Retrieved 30 June 2018.
  16. ^ Beveridge, William (November 1942). "Social Insurance and Allied Services" (PDF). HM Stationery Office. Retrieved 3 March 2013.
  17. ^ White Paper – A National Health Service, YouTube.
  18. ^ Charles Webster, The Health Services since the War, Volume 1: Problems of Health Care, The National Health Service Before 1957 (London: HMSO, 1988), p. 399.
  19. ^ Ruth Barrington, Health, Medicine & Politics in Ireland 1900–1970 (Institute of Public Administration: Dublin, 1987) pp. 188–89.
  20. ^ Wales, NHS (23 October 2006). "NHS Wales | 1960's". www.wales.nhs.uk. Retrieved 22 November 2016.
  21. ^ Delamothe, Tony (2008). "Founding Principles (31 May 2008)". BMJ (Clinical Research Ed.). British Medical Journal. 336 (7655): 1216–1218. doi:10.1136/bmj.39582.501192.94. PMC 2405823. PMID 18511796.
  22. ^ Webster C. The National Health Service: a political history. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2002.
  23. ^ "NHS Bill Second Reading". Hansard. 30 April 1946.
  24. ^ "Kingsfund, July 2013".[permanent dead link]
  25. ^ "The NHS in England – About the NHS – NHS core principles". Nhs.uk. 23 March 2009. Retrieved 27 June 2017.
  26. ^ "Paying for dental treatment in the UK". Oral Health Foundation. Retrieved 2 February 2021.
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Further reading

  • Brady, Robert A. Crisis in Britain. Plans and Achievements of the Labour Government (1950) pp. 352–41 excerpt
  • Gorsky, Martin. "The British National Health Service 1948–2008: A Review of the Historiography," Social History of Medicine, Dec 2008, Vol. 21 Issue 3, pp. 437–60
  • Hacker, Jacob S. "The Historical Logic of National Health Insurance: Structure and Sequence in the Development of British, Canadian, and U.S. Medical Policy," Studies in American Political Development, April 1998, Vol. 12 Issue 1, pp. 57–130.
  • Hilton, Claire. (26 August 2016). Whistle-blowing in the National Health Service since the 1960s History and Policy. Retrieved 11 May 2017.
  • Loudon, Irvine, John Horder and Charles Webster. General Practice under the National Health Service 1948–1997 (1998) online
  • Rintala, Marvin. Creating the National Health Service: Aneurin Bevan and the Medical Lords (2003) online.
  • Rivett G. C. From Cradle to Grave: The First 50 (65) Years of the NHS. King's Fund, London, 1998 now updated to 2014 and available at www.nhshistory.co.uk
  • Stewart, John. "The Political Economy of the British National Health Service, 1945–1975: Opportunities and Constraints", Medical History, October 2008, Vol. 52, Issue 4, pp. 453–70.
  • Webster, Charles. "Conflict and Consensus: Explaining the British Health Service", Twentieth Century British History, April 1990, Vol. 1 Issue 2, pp. 115–51
  • Webster, Charles. Health Services Since the War. Vol. 1: Problems of Health Care. The National Health Service before 1957 (1988) 479pp online

External links

  • Official website of the NHS in England
  • Official website of NHS Scotland
  • Official website of NHS Wales
  • Official website of Health and Social Care in Northern Ireland

national, health, service, redirects, here, other, uses, disambiguation, individual, national, healthcare, services, england, scotland, wales, northern, ireland, england, scotland, wales, health, social, care, northern, ireland, umbrella, term, publicly, funde. NHS redirects here For other uses see NHS disambiguation For the individual national healthcare services of England Scotland Wales and Northern Ireland see National Health Service England NHS Scotland NHS Wales and Health and Social Care Northern Ireland The National Health Service NHS is the umbrella term for the publicly funded healthcare systems of the United Kingdom UK Since 1948 they have been funded out of general taxation There are three systems which are referred to using the NHS name NHS England NHS Scotland and NHS Wales Health and Social Care in Northern Ireland was created separately 2 and is often locally referred to as the NHS The four systems were established in 1948 as part of major social reforms following the Second World War The founding principles were that services should be comprehensive universal and free at the point of delivery a health service based on clinical need not ability to pay 3 Each service provides a comprehensive range of health services free at the point of use for people ordinarily resident in the United Kingdom apart from dental treatment and optical care 4 In England NHS patients have to pay prescription charges some such as those aged over 60 and certain state benefit recipients are exempt 5 Logos of theNational Health ServiceLogo of the NHS in England a 1 Logo of HSC in Northern IrelandLogo of NHS ScotlandLogo of NHS Wales Taken together the four National Health Services in 2015 16 employed around 1 6 million people with a combined budget of 136 7 billion 6 In 2014 the total health sector workforce across the United Kingdom was 2 165 043 This broke down into 1 789 586 in England 198 368 in Scotland 110 292 in Wales and 66 797 in Northern Ireland 7 In 2017 there were 691 000 nurses registered in the United Kingdom down 1 783 from the previous year However this is the first time nursing numbers have fallen since 2008 Every 24 hours it sees one million patients and with 1 7 million staff it is the fifth biggest employer in the world 8 as well as the largest non military public organisation in the world 9 When purchasing drugs the four healthcare services have significant market power that based on their own assessment of the fair value of the drugs influences the global price typically keeping prices lower 10 A small number of products are procured jointly by two or more UK healthcare services 11 Several other countries either copy the United Kingdom s model or directly rely on Britain s assessments for their own decisions on state financed drug reimbursements 12 Contents 1 History 2 Eligibility for treatment 3 Historical issues 3 1 Funding 3 2 Staffing 3 3 British exit from the European Union 3 4 Rising social care costs 3 5 Mental health 3 6 Medicines 4 Performance 4 1 Role in combating coronavirus pandemic 5 Hospital beds 6 NHS music releases 7 See also 8 Notes 9 References 10 Further reading 11 External linksHistory EditFurther information History of the National Health Service History of the National Health Service England History of NHS Scotland and History of NHS Wales Aneurin Bevan the founder of the NHS 13 Calls for a unified medical service can be dated back to the Minority Report of the Royal Commission on the Poor Law in 1909 14 Somerville Hastings President of the Socialist Medical Association successfully proposed a resolution at the 1934 Labour Party Conference that the party should be committed to the establishment of a State Health Service 15 Following the 1942 Beveridge Report s recommendation to create comprehensive health and rehabilitation services for prevention and cure of disease cross party consensus emerged on introducing a National Health Service of some description 16 Conservative MP and Health Minister Henry Willink later advanced this notion of a National Health Service in 1944 with his consultative White Paper A National Health Service which was circulated in full and short versions to colleagues as well as in newsreel 17 When Clement Attlee s Labour Party won the 1945 election he appointed Aneurin Bevan as Health Minister Bevan then embarked upon what the official historian of the NHS Charles Webster called an audacious campaign to take charge of the form the NHS finally took 18 Bevan s National Health Service was proposed in Westminster legislation for England and Wales from 1946 and Scotland from 1947 and the Northern Ireland Parliament s Public Health Services Act 1947 19 NHS Wales was split from NHS England in 1969 when control was passed to the Secretary of State for Wales 20 According to one history of the NHS In some respects the war had made things easier In anticipation of massive air raid casualties the Emergency Medical Service had brought the country s municipal and voluntary hospitals into one umbrella organisation showing that a national hospital service was possible 21 Webster wrote in 2002 that the Luftwaffe achieved in months what had defeated politicians and planners for at least two decades 22 The NHS was born out of the ideal that healthcare should be available to all regardless of wealth Although being freely accessible regardless of wealth maintained Henry Willink s principle of free healthcare for all Conservative MPs were in favour of maintaining local administration of the NHS through existing arrangements with local authorities fearing that an NHS which owned hospitals on a national scale would lose the personal relationship between doctor and patient 23 Conservative MPs voted in favour of their amendment to Bevan s Bill to maintain local control and ownership of hospitals and against Bevan s plan for national ownership of all hospitals The Labour government defeated Conservative amendments and went ahead with the NHS as it remains today a single large national organisation with devolved equivalents which forced the transfer of ownership of hospitals from local authorities and charities to the new NHS Bevan s principle of ownership with no private sector involvement has since been diluted with later Labour governments implementing large scale financing arrangements with private builders in private finance initiatives and joint ventures 24 At its launch by Bevan on 5 July 1948 it had at its heart three core principles That it meet the needs of everyone that it be free at the point of delivery and that it be based on clinical need not ability to pay 25 Three years after the founding of the NHS Bevan resigned from the Labour government in opposition to the introduction of charges for the provision of dentures dentists 26 and glasses resigning in support was fellow minister and future Prime Minister Harold Wilson 27 The following year Winston Churchill s Conservative government introduced prescription fees However Wilson s government abolished them in 1965 they were later re introduced but with exemptions for those on low income 28 These charges were the first of many controversies over changes to the NHS throughout its history 29 From its earliest days the cultural history of the NHS has shown its place in British society reflected and debated in film TV cartoons and literature The NHS had a prominent slot during the 2012 London Summer Olympics opening ceremony directed by Danny Boyle being described as the institution which more than any other unites our nation 30 Eligibility for treatment EditThis section s factual accuracy may be compromised due to out of date information The reason given is Because of Brexit EEA nationals that do not have settled status are now subject to the same restrictions that applied to non EEA non UK residents Please help update this article to reflect recent events or newly available information September 2022 See also Immigration health surcharge Everyone living in the UK can use the NHS without being asked to pay the full cost of the service though NHS dentistry and optometry do have standard charges in each of the four national health services in the UK 31 In addition most patients in England have to pay charges for prescriptions though some patients are exempted 5 Aneurin Bevan in considering the provision of NHS services to overseas visitors wrote in 1952 that it would be unwise as well as mean to withhold the free service from the visitor to Britain How do we distinguish a visitor from anybody else Are British citizens to carry means of identification everywhere to prove that they are not visitors For if the sheep are to be separated from the goats both must be classified What began as an attempt to keep the Health Service for ourselves would end by being a nuisance to everybody 32 The provision of free treatment to non UK residents formerly interpreted liberally has been increasingly restricted with new overseas visitor hospital charging regulations introduced in 2015 33 Citizens of the EU holding a valid European Health Insurance Card and persons from certain other countries with which the UK has reciprocal arrangements concerning health care can get emergency treatment without charge 34 The NHS is free at the point of use for general practitioner GP and emergency treatment not including admission to hospital to non residents 35 People with the right to medical care in European Economic Area EEA nations are also entitled to free treatment by using the European Health Insurance Card Those from other countries with which the UK has reciprocal arrangements also qualify for free treatment 36 37 Since 6 April 2015 non EEA nationals who are subject to immigration control must have the immigration status of indefinite leave to remain at the time of treatment and be properly settled to be considered ordinarily resident People not ordinarily resident in the UK are in general not entitled to free hospital treatment with some exceptions such as refugees 4 38 People not ordinarily resident may be subject to an interview to establish their eligibility which must be resolved before non emergency treatment can commence Patients who do not qualify for free treatment are asked to pay in advance or to sign a written undertaking to pay except for emergency treatment People from outside the EEA coming to the UK for a temporary stay of more than six months are required to pay an immigration health surcharge at the time of visa application and will then be entitled to NHS treatment on the same basis as a resident This includes overseas students with a visa to study at a recognised institution for 6 months or more but not visitors on a tourist visa 39 In 2016 the surcharge was 200 per year with exemptions and reductions in some cases 40 This was increased to 400 in 2018 The discounted rate for students and those on the Youth Mobility Scheme will increase from 150 to 300 41 From 15 January 2007 anyone who is working outside the UK as a missionary for an organisation with its principal place of business in the UK is fully exempt from NHS charges for services that would normally be provided free of charge to those resident in the UK This is regardless of whether they derive a salary or wage from the organisation or receive any type of funding or assistance from the organisation for the purposes of working overseas 42 This is in recognition of the fact that most missionaries would be unable to afford private health care and those working in developing countries should not effectively be penalised for their contribution to development and other work Those who are not ordinarily resident including British citizens who may have paid National Insurance contributions in the past are liable to charges for services There are some other categories of people who are exempt from the residence requirements such as specific government workers and those in the armed forces stationed overseas Historical issues EditThe trade union Unite said back in early 2019 that the NHS had been under pressure as a result of economic austerity 43 A 2018 public survey reported that public satisfaction with the NHS has fallen from 70 in 2010 to 53 in 2018 44 The NHS is consistently ranked as the institution that makes people proudest to be British beating the Royal family Armed Forces and the BBC 45 One 2019 survey ranked nurses and doctors not necessarily NHS staff amongst the most trustworthy professions in the UK 46 Funding Edit NHS Spending 1948 49 2014 15 47 The systems are 98 8 funded from general taxation and National Insurance contributions plus small amounts from patient charges for some services 48 49 About 10 of GDP is spent on health and most is spent in the public sector 50 The money to pay for the NHS comes directly from taxation The 2008 09 budget roughly equates to a contribution of 1 980 per person in the UK 51 When the NHS was launched in 1948 it had a budget of 437 million 52 equivalent to 16 91 billion in 2021 In 2016 2017 the budget was 122 5 billion 53 In 1955 56 health spending was 11 2 of the public services budget In 2015 16 it was 29 7 54 This equates to an average rise in spending over the full 60 year period of about 4 a year once inflation has been taken into account Under the Blair government spending levels increased by around 6 a year on average Since 2010 spending growth has been constrained to just over 1 a year 54 Some 60 of the NHS budget is used to pay staff A further 20 pays for drugs and other supplies with the remaining 20 split between buildings equipment training costs medical equipment catering and cleaning Nearly 80 of the total budget is distributed by local trusts in line with the particular health priorities in their areas 55 Since 2010 there has been a cap of 1 on pay rises for staff continuing in the same role Unions representing doctors dentists nurses and other health professionals have called on the government to end the cap on health service pay claiming the cap is damaging the health service and damaging patient care 56 The pay rise is likely to be below the level of inflation and to mean a real terms pay cut 57 The House of Commons Library did research showing that real terms NHS funding per head was to fall in 2018 19 and stay the same for two years afterwards 58 There appears to be support for higher taxation to pay for extra spending on the NHS as an opinion poll in 2016 showed that 70 of people were willing to pay an extra penny in the pound in income tax if the money were ringfenced and guaranteed for the NHS 59 Two thirds of respondents to a King s Fund poll favour increased taxation to help finance the NHS 60 The Guardian has said that GPs face excessive workloads throughout Britain and that this puts the GP s health and that of their patients at risk 61 The Royal College of Physicians surveyed doctors across the UK with two thirds maintaining patient safety had deteriorated during the year to 2018 80 feared they would be unable to provide safe patient care in the coming year while 84 felt increased pressure on the NHS was demoralising the workforce Jane Dacre said We simply cannot go through this a winter when the NHS is badly overstretched again It is not as if the situation was either new or unexpected As the NHS reaches 70 our patients deserve better Somehow we need to move faster towards a better resourced adequately staffed NHS during 2018 or it will happen again 62 At a time when the NHS is short of doctors foreign doctors are forced to leave the UK due to visa restrictions 63 A study found that a fifth of doctors had faced bullying from seniors in the previous year due to pressure at work 64 The NHS is under resourced compared to health provisions in other developed nations A King s Fund study of OECD data from 21 nations revealed that the NHS has among the lowest numbers of doctors nurses and hospital beds per capita in the western world 65 Nurses within the NHS maintain that patient care is compromised by the shortage of nurses and the lack of experienced nurses with the necessary qualifications 66 According to a YouGov poll 74 of the UK public believes there are too few nurses 67 The NHS performs below average in preventing deaths from cancer strokes and heart disease 68 Staff shortages at histology departments are delaying diagnosis and start of treatment for cancer patients 69 In England and Scotland cancer wards and children s wards have to close because the hospital cannot attract sufficient qualified doctors and nurses to run the wards safely Cancer patients and child patients are having to travel very long distances to get treatment and their relatives must travel far to visit the patients In wards which have not closed staff sometimes work under stress due to staff shortages Brexit is likely to aggravate these problems 70 Due to the shortage of nurses the NHS is relying on less qualified staff like healthcare assistants and nursing associates 71 Cancer survival rates in the UK have been rising fast but probably still lag behind the best results internationally mainly because of late diagnosis 72 However death rates from breast cancer are falling faster in Britain than in any other of the six largest countries in Europe and are estimated now to have improved beyond the European average 73 74 According to Breast Cancer Care 72 of NHS trusts across the UK do not provide dedicated specialist nurses for patients with incurable breast cancer 75 72 Cancer Research UK maintains more NHS cancer personnel are needed to enable the UK to catch up The NHS in England is expanding early diagnosis services with the goal of increasing the proportion of cancers diagnosed early at stages 1 and 2 from 53 to 75 in the decade to 2028 76 The NHS was the first health service in Europe to negotiate coverage for novel CAR T cancer therapy with agreement reached within 10 days of its European marketing authorisation 77 In 2018 British Prime Minister Theresa May announced that NHS in England would receive a 3 4 increase in funding every year to 2024 which would allow it to receive an extra 20bn a year in real terms funding 78 There is concern that a high proportion of this money will go to service NHS debts rather than for improved patient care There are calls for the government to write off the NHS debt Saffron Cordery of NHS Providers said that hospitals needed help to do their work without being up in deficit as two thirds were in the year to 2018 79 Some expressed doubt over whether May could carry out this proposed increase in funding 80 The next day Health Secretary Jeremy Hunt backed the extra 20bn annual increase in NHS funding and responded to criticism by stating that taxation would be used to carry out the funding and that details would be revealed when the next budget is unveiled in November 78 81 The Institute for Fiscal Studies has stated a 5 real terms increase was needed for real change Paul Johnson of the IFS said the 3 4 was greater than recent increases but less than the long term average 82 Health experts maintain the money will help stem further decline in the health service but it s simply not enough to address the fundamental challenges facing the NHS or fund essential improvements to services that are flagging 83 Inflation may erode the real value of this funding increase 84 As part of the 2018 funding increase the UK Government asked the NHS in England to produce a 10 year plan as to how this funding would be used On 7 January 2019 the NHS England published the NHS Long Term Plan In March 2022 Rishi Sunak doubled the annual efficiency target for the NHS in England The 2 2 per cent target would deliver annual savings of saving of 4 75 billion At the same time the additional covid funding is being removed in 2022 23 85 At the same time Sir Charles Bean recently leader of the Office for Budget Responsibility pointed out that the rising trend in health and social care spending and pensions will be adding something like another 75 billion spending over the next five years 150 billion potentially over the next decade as if treatments are available to keep people alive longer then people will want them 86 Staffing Edit EU workers joining and leaving the NHS in England annual variation in absolute numbers 2012 2017 87 Joiner Leaver The United Kingdom s exit from the European Union will affect physicians from EU countries about 11 of the physician workforce 88 A survey suggested 60 of these physicians were considering leaving 89 Record numbers of EU nationals 17 197 EU staff working in the NHS which include nurses and doctors left in 2016 The figures put together by NHS Digital led to calls to reassure European workers over their future in the UK 90 In June 2018 the Royal College of Physicians calculated that medical training places need to be increased from 7 500 to 15 000 by 2030 to take account of part time working among other factors At that time there were 47 800 consultants working in the UK of which 15 700 were physicians About 20 of consultants work less than full time 91 A study by the Centre for Progressive Policy called for NHS trusts to become exemplar employers by improving social mobility and pay especially for those trusts in poorer places where they can play a particularly large role in determining the economic wellbeing of the local population They found the NHS to be a middle ranking employer in comparison to other large organisations and falls short on social mobility and the real Living Wage and ranked trusts using a good employer index Ambulance trusts were ranked worst 92 In September 2021 the Daily Telegraph carried a story saying that nearly half of all NHS staff have no medical qualifications being managers administrators or unqualified assistants 93 On 6 June 2022 the Guardian said that a survey of more than 20 000 frontline staff by the nurses trade union and professional body 94 the Royal College of Nursing said that only a quarter of shifts had the planned number of registered nurses on duty The Guardian said that the union s general secretary in her keynote speech at their annual congress in Glasgow was expected to say that large numbers of nurses are leaving the profession because they are demoralised and overworked and that they had concerns over patient safety 95 The NHS is facing a shortage of general practitioners From 2015 to 2022 the number of GPs has fallen by 1 622 Some family doctors have 2 500 patients each forcing patients to attend A amp E instead Certain regions have fewer than 50 GPs per 100 000 people while other regions have more than 70 presenting a challenge to the NHS s founding principle of equal treatment A growing number of family doctors are reporting unsustainable workloads and many have chosen to work part time A Health and Social Care spokesperson said that the department is making 4 000 training positions available for GPs every year which help create an extra 50 million appointments annually 96 British exit from the European Union Edit This section needs to be updated Please help update this article to reflect recent events or newly available information July 2022 There is concern that a disorderly Brexit may compromise patients access to vital medicines In February 2018 many medical organisations were planning for a worst case Brexit scenario because time is running out for a transition deal to follow the UK s formal exit scheduled for March 2019 97 Pharmaceutical organisations working with the Civil Service to keep medicine supplies available in the case of a no deal Brexit had to sign 26 Non Disclosure Agreements NDAs to prevent them from giving the public information The figures were given on 21 December 2018 after Rushanara Ali asked a parliamentary question Ali said It is utterly unacceptable for the government to use non disclosure agreements with pharmaceutical businesses and trade associations By effectively gagging these organisations these secretive agreements are preventing essential information from being shared are undermining transparency and are hampering businesses ability to speak out 98 As negotiations continue between the UK and the EU as of 1 January 2021 vulnerable people needing treatment when working living or travelling to the UK may lose out by not having access to NHS Care 99 Rising social care costs Edit Social care will cost more in future according to research by Liverpool University University College London and others and higher investment are needed Professor Helen Stokes Lampard of the Royal College of GPs said It s a great testament to medical research and the NHS that we are living longer but we need to ensure that our patients are living longer with a good quality of life For this to happen we need a properly funded properly staffed health and social care sector with general practice hospitals and social care all working together and all communicating well with each other in the best interests of delivering safe care to all our patients 100 Mental health Edit Further information Mental health in the United Kingdom Some patients have to wait excessively long for mental health care The Royal College of Psychiatrists found some must wait up to thirteen months for the right care Wendy Burn of the Royal College of Psychiatrists said It is a scandal that patients are waiting so long for treatment The failure to give people with mental illnesses the prompt help they need is ruining their lives Even patients who are suicidal or who have attempted suicide are sometimes denied treatment patients are told they are not ill enough or waiting lists are too long During very long waits for treatment one in three patients deteriorate and they may become unemployed or get divorced One in four patients throughout the UK wait over three months to see an NHS mental health professional with 6 waiting at least a year 101 The National Audit Office found mental health provisions for children and young people will not meet growing demand despite promises of increased funding Even if promises to provide 1 4bn more for the sector are kept there will be significant unmet need due to staff shortages inadequate data and failure to control spending by NHS clinical commissioning groups Currently one quarter of young people needing mental health services can get NHS help The Department of Health and Social Care hopes to raise the ratio to 35 Efforts to improve mental health provisions could reveal previously unmet demand 102 Meg Hillier of the select committee on public accounts said The government currently estimates that less than a third of children and young people with a diagnosable mental health condition are receiving treatment But the government doesn t understand how many children and young people are in need of treatment or how funding is being spent locally The government urgently needs to set out how departments and national and local bodies are going to work together to achieve its long term ambition Amyas Morse said Current targets to improve care are modest and even if met would still mean two thirds of those who need help are not seen Rising estimates of demand may indicate that the government is even further away than it thought 102 In response NHS England has embarked on a major programme to expand mental health services whose budgets are now growing faster than the NHS overall 103 MIND the mental health charity responded saying We are pleased that the plan includes a commitment of 2 3bn a year towards mental health to help redress the balance The plan promises that this money will see around two million more people with anxiety depression and other mental health problems receive help including new parents and 24 hour access to crisis care The plan also includes a guarantee that investment in primary community and mental health care will grow faster than the growing overall NHS budget so that different parts of the NHS come together to provide better joined up care in partnership with local government Since the funding announcement in the summer Mind has been working with the NHS Government and voluntary sector to help shape the long term plan This longer term strategy was developed in consultation with people with mental health problems to ensure their views are reflected 103 Medicines Edit In November 2019 unprecedented shortages of medicines patients needed developed Drugs to treat cancer heart disease Parkinson s disease mental health conditions some eye conditions antibiotics for tuberculosis and drugs to control epilepsy are among those in short supply Life saving drugs will have to be rationed and not all patients who need them will get them Some patients can be switched onto other drugs though this may increase the workload of hard pressed medical staff other patients cannot be switched to alternative drugs Many problems can impact the supply chain like IT failure speculators stockpiling drugs alterations in regulation and sudden disease outbreaks Tony O Sullivan of Keep Our NHS Public said The Health Department s guidance includes an unprecedented list of drugs unavailable or in short supply Patients and clinicians alike should be on high alert when the advice includes how to share stocks to make them last to prioritise patients already on specific treatments including cancer rather than a new patient and effectively how to ration so many vital drugs Drug companies behaviour must be controlled We must urgently protect the NHS from further risks of loss of control of drug prices and supplies from trade deals with the US and that requires returning it to a wholly public service 104 105 Performance EditPerformance of the NHS is generally assessed separately at the level of England Wales Scotland and Northern Ireland Since 2004 the Commonwealth Fund has produced surveys Mirror Mirror on the Wall comparing the performance of health systems in 11 wealthy countries in which the UK generally ranks highly In the 2021 survey the NHS dropped from first overall to fourth as it had fallen in key areas including access to care and equity 106 The Euro Health Consumer Index attempted to rank the NHS against other European health systems from 2014 to 2018 Civitas produced an International Health Care Outcomes Index in 2022 ranking the performance of the UK health care system against 18 similar wealthy countries since 2000 It excluded the impact of the Covid 19 pandemic as data stopped in 2019 The UK was near the bottom of most tables except households who faced catastrophic health spending 107 A comparative analysis of health care systems in 2010 put the NHS second in a study of seven rich countries 108 109 The report put the UK health systems above those of Germany Canada and the US the NHS was deemed the most efficient among those health systems studied A 2018 study by the King s Fund Health Foundation Nuffield Trust and the Institute for Fiscal Studies to mark the NHS 70th anniversary concluded that the main weakness of the NHS was healthcare outcomes Mortality for cancer heart attacks and stroke was higher than average among comparable countries The NHS was doing well at protecting people from heavy financial costs when ill Waiting times were about the same and the management of longterm illness was better than in other comparable countries Efficiency was good with low administrative costs and high use of cheaper generic medicines 110 Twenty nine hospital trusts and boards out of 157 had not met any waiting time target in the year 2017 2018 111 The Office for National Statistics reported in January 2019 that productivity in the English NHS had been growing at 3 considerably faster than across the rest of the UK economy 112 In 2019 The Times commenting on a study in the British Medical Journal reported that Britain spent the least on health 3 000 per person compared with an average of 4 400 and had the highest number of deaths that might have been prevented with prompt treatment The BMJ study compared the healthcare systems of other developed countries in spending staff numbers and avoidable deaths 113 Over 130 000 deaths since 2012 in the UK could have been prevented if progress in public health policy had not stopped due to austerity analysis by the Institute for Public Policy Research found Dean Hochlaf of the IPPR said We have seen progress in reducing preventable disease flatline since 2012 114 The key NHS performance indicators 18 weeks RTT 4 hours A amp E and cancer 2 week wait have not been achieved since February 2016 July 2015 and December 2015 respectively 115 Civitas published an International Health Care Outcomes Index in April 2022 comparing health care outcomes in global health systems across 19 comparable countries It considered health spending life expectancy major disease outcomes and outcomes for treatable mortality and childbirth Across 16 metrics with data to 2019 or most recent available the UK ranked at the bottom four times stroke heart attack and colon cancer survival and in the bottom three eight times No other comparable country had such a poor record It was the best performer for one metric the avoidance of diabetic limb amputations 116 A ranking of individual hospitals around the world published by Newsweek in March 2022 no NHS hospital was listed within the top 40 St Thomas Hospital was ranked at 41 followed by University College Hospital at 54 and Addenbrooke s Hospital at 79 117 Overall satisfaction with the NHS in 2021 fell more sharply in Scotland than in England 17 points to 36 the lowest level since 1997 according to the British Social Attitudes Survey Dissatisfaction with hospital and GP waiting times were the biggest cause of the fall 118 The NHS Confederation polled 182 health leaders and 9 in 10 warned that inadequate capital funding harmed their ability to meet safety requirements for patients in health settings including hospitals ambulance community and mental health services and GP practices 119 See also Health system Health systems performance Role in combating coronavirus pandemic Edit Main article COVID 19 pandemic in the United Kingdom See also COVID 19 vaccination programme in the United Kingdom In 2020 the NHS issued medical advice in combating COVID 19 and partnered with tech companies to create computer dashboards to help combat the nation s coronavirus pandemic 120 121 During the pandemic the NHS also established integrated COVID into its 1 1 1 service line as well 122 Following his discharge from the St Thomas Hospital in London on 13 April 2020 after being diagnosed with COVID 19 British Prime Minister Boris Johnson described NHS medical care as astonishing and said that the NHS saved my life No question 123 124 In this time the NHS underwent major re organisation to prepare for the COVID 19 pandemic 125 On the 5 July 2021 Queen Elizabeth II awarded the NHS the George Cross 126 The George Cross the highest award for gallantry available to civilians and is slightly lower in stature to the Victoria Cross is bestowed for acts of the greatest heroism or most conspicuous courage In a handwritten note the Queen said the award was being made to all NHS staff past and present for their courage compassion and dedication throughout the pandemic 127 Hospital beds EditIn 2015 the UK had 2 6 hospital beds per 1 000 people 128 In September 2017 the King s Fund documented the number of NHS hospital beds in England as 142 000 describing this as less than 50 of the number 30 years previously 129 In 2019 one tenth of the beds in the UK were occupied by a patient who was alcohol dependent 130 NHS music releases EditNHS charity songs under various choir names have become a tradition usually at Christmas time but not necessarily and various formation carrying the name of NHS have released singles including 2015 National Health Singers Yours 2015 NHS Choir A Bridge Over You being a mashup of Bridge Over Troubled Water and Fix You 2018 NHS Voices With a Little Help from My Friends 2018 National Health Singers NHS 70 Won t Let Go 2020 NHS and keyworkers You ll Never Walk Alone See also EditHistory of the NHS England History of NHS Scotland History of NHS Wales Private providers of NHS servicesGeneral Health care in the United Kingdom Health in the United KingdomNotes Edit Sometimes used as a UK wide logo for unofficial purposes The three other national health services in the UK outside England have their own logos and names References Edit NHS Identity Guidelines NHS logo www england nhs uk Retrieved 11 November 2021 Health funding in Northern Ireland Northern Ireland Affairs Committee House of Commons Choices NHS The principles and values of the NHS in England www nhs uk Retrieved 23 November 2016 a b NHS entitlements migrant health guide Detailed guidance UK Government Retrieved 6 June 2016 a b Who can get free prescriptions NHS 9 November 2020 Retrieved 5 January 2022 10 truths about Britain s health service Guardian 18 January 2016 Retrieved 19 January 2016 Cowper Andy 23 May 2016 Visible and valued the way forward for the NHS s hidden army Health Service Journal Retrieved 28 July 2016 Triggle Nick 24 May 2018 10 charts that show why the NHS is in trouble Retrieved 6 October 2019 Tombs Robert 2014 The English and Their History Vintage Books p 864 The UK has much to fear from a US trade agreement www newstatesman com 3 June 2019 Retrieved 5 June 2019 An overview of NHS Procurement of Medicines and Pharmaceutical Products and Services for acute care in the United Kingdom PDF www sps nhs uk Retrieved 24 May 2021 US takes aim at the UK s National Health Service POLITICO 4 June 2019 Retrieved 5 June 2019 Thomas Symonds Nick 3 July 2018 70 years of the NHS How Aneurin Bevan created our beloved health service The Independent Archived from the original on 18 June 2022 Retrieved 5 July 2018 Brian Abel Smith The Hospitals 1800 1948 London 1964 p 229 Health Service debate Labour Party October 1934 Retrieved 30 June 2018 Beveridge William November 1942 Social Insurance and Allied Services PDF HM Stationery Office Retrieved 3 March 2013 White Paper A National Health Service YouTube Charles Webster The Health Services since the War Volume 1 Problems of Health Care The National Health Service Before 1957 London HMSO 1988 p 399 Ruth Barrington Health Medicine amp Politics in Ireland 1900 1970 Institute of Public Administration Dublin 1987 pp 188 89 Wales NHS 23 October 2006 NHS Wales 1960 s www wales nhs uk Retrieved 22 November 2016 Delamothe Tony 2008 Founding Principles 31 May 2008 BMJ Clinical Research Ed British Medical Journal 336 7655 1216 1218 doi 10 1136 bmj 39582 501192 94 PMC 2405823 PMID 18511796 Webster C The National Health Service a political history Oxford Oxford University Press 2002 NHS Bill Second Reading Hansard 30 April 1946 Kingsfund July 2013 permanent dead link The NHS in England About the NHS NHS core principles Nhs uk 23 March 2009 Retrieved 27 June 2017 Paying for dental treatment in the UK Oral Health Foundation Retrieved 2 February 2021 Kenneth O Morgan Aneurin Bevan in Kevin Jeffreys ed Labour Forces From Ernie Bevin to Gordon Brown I B Taurus London amp New York 2002 pp 91 92 NHS prescription charges politics co uk 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with the Home Office guidance for overseas patients Overseas chargeable patients NHS debt and immigration rules guidance on administration and data sharing Ordinary residence tool and documents on Equality analysis Nardelli Alberto 11 August 2015 Are foreigners really gaming the NHS to pay for their medical treatment abroad The Guardian Visiting or moving to England How to access NHS services see Hospital Services section NHS Choices 26 June 2015 Retrieved 6 June 2016 NHS charges for people from abroad Citizens Advice Retrieved 16 November 2010 Non EEA country by country guide Healthcare abroad NHS Choices 1 January 2016 Retrieved 6 June 2016 Categories of exemption Healthcare in England for visitors NHS Choices NHS England 18 August 2015 Retrieved 6 June 2016 Bruno Rodrigues Important NHS charges in visa applications Archived 21 December 2018 at the Wayback Machine Immigration Media 18 March 2015 NHS Choices 18 August 2015 Moving from outside the EEA Access to healthcare in England Nhs uk Retrieved 6 June 2016 Increase in health charge paid by temporary migrants OnMedica 6 February 2018 Archived from the original on 6 February 2018 Retrieved 2 April 2018 National Health Service Charges to Overseas Visitors Regulations 1989 NHS public satisfaction dip due to government austerity policies says Unite Public satisfaction with the NHS and social care in 2018 The King s Fund 7 March 2019 Retrieved 30 September 2019 Team Mintel Press The NHS tops list of UK s most cherished institutions Mintel Retrieved 30 September 2019 Advertising execs rank below politicians as Britain s least trusted profession Ipsos MORI Archived from the original on 30 September 2019 Retrieved 30 September 2019 Health spending www ifs org uk How the NHS is funded TheKing sFund 15 January 2016 Retrieved 6 June 2016 Underfunded underdoctored overstretched The NHS in 2016 Royal College of Physicians 21 September 2016 Retrieved 20 October 2021 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite 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CS1 maint url status link Forster Katie 28 March 2017 NHS staff suffer pay cuts in real terms as salaries rise by one per cent The Independent Archived from the original on 18 June 2022 Retrieved 20 October 2021 Stewart Heather Campbell Denis 23 November 2017 Conservatives will break NHS funding pledge Labour claims The Guardian Retrieved 20 October 2021 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint url status link Mason Rowena 30 December 2016 People may be ready to pay extra penny on tax for NHS Tim Farron says The Guardian Retrieved 20 October 2021 a href Template Cite news html title Template Cite news cite news a CS1 maint url status link Campbell Denis 16 September 2017 Two thirds support higher taxes to maintain NHS funding The Guardian Retrieved 20 October 2021 a href Template Cite news html title Template Cite news cite news a CS1 maint url status link Marsh Sarah 18 January 2018 Family doctors working beyond safe levels says GPs leader The Guardian London ISSN 1756 3224 Retrieved 4 April 2020 Booth Robert 12 March 2018 Patient safety getting worse say two thirds of NHS doctors The Guardian London ISSN 1756 3224 Retrieved 4 April 2020 Bulman Mary 5 June 2018 Doctors told to leave UK after Home Office refuses to issue them visas The Independent Archived from the original on 18 June 2022 Retrieved 20 October 2021 Campbell Denis 1 November 2018 A fifth of NHS doctors were bullied or abused last year study finds The Guardian London ISSN 1756 3224 Retrieved 4 April 2020 Campbell Denis 5 May 2018 Shock figures from top thinktank reveal extent of NHS crisis The Observer London Guardian Media Group ISSN 0029 7712 Retrieved 4 April 2020 Savage Michael 12 May 2018 Danger to patients revealed in reports by 18 000 NHS nurses The Observer Triggle Nick 13 May 2018 Three quarters of public worried about nurse staffing BBC Retrieved 20 October 2021 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint url status link Triggle Nick 26 June 2018 NHS poor on treating deadly illnesses BBC News Retrieved 20 October 2021 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint url status link Forde Emma 16 September 2018 Pathologists shortage delaying cancer diagnosis BBC News Retrieved 20 October 2021 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint url status link Campbell Denis 18 November 2018 UK cancer and children s wards being hit by closures The Guardian Retrieved 20 October 2021 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint url status link PA Media 28 November 2019 Nursing shortages forcing NHS to rely on less qualified staff report The Guardian a b Cancer survival in the UK improving but lagging behind study BBC News 12 September 2019 Retrieved 20 October 2021 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint url status link Malvezzi M Carioli G Bertuccio P Boffetta P Levi F La Vecchia C Negri E 19 March 2019 European cancer mortality predictions for the year 2019 with focus on breast cancer Annals of Oncology Oxford University Press OUP 30 5 781 787 doi 10 1093 annonc mdz051 ISSN 0923 7534 PMID 30887043 Campbell Denis 19 March 2019 UK breast cancer death rates falling fastest in big six of Europe The Guardian Ives Laurel 13 October 2018 Terminal breast cancer patients abandoned in nurse shortage BBC News Retrieved 20 October 2021 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint url status link Boseley Sarah 11 September 2019 UK still behind in cancer survival despite recent surge The Guardian Retrieved 20 October 2021 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint url status link Children with no other hope to receive groundbreaking cancer treatment on NHS after funding deal The Independent 5 September 2018 Archived from the original on 18 June 2022 Retrieved 30 September 2019 a b Taxes and Brexit dividend to fund NHS cash boost Sky News Retrieved 20 October 2021 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint url status link Campbell Denis 21 October 2018 NHS 20bn boost risks being spent to pay off debts experts warn The Guardian Retrieved 21 June 2021 Walker Peter 17 June 2018 May s NHS Brexit dividend claim draws scepticism and doubt The Guardian NHS spending boost will increase burden of taxation says Jeremy Hunt Jersey Evening Post 18 June 2018 Retrieved 20 October 2021 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint url status link Walker Peter 17 June 2018 May s NHS Brexit dividend claim draws scepticism and doubt The Guardian Retrieved 14 March 2020 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint url status link Spending on the NHS in England fullfact org 20 July 2016 Retrieved 14 March 2020 Savage Michael 25 November 2018 NHS facing huge shortfall without Treasury injection The Guardian Retrieved 14 March 2020 a 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The Guardian Retrieved 11 November 2020 Further reading EditBrady Robert A Crisis in Britain Plans and Achievements of the Labour Government 1950 pp 352 41 excerpt Gorsky Martin The British National Health Service 1948 2008 A Review of the Historiography Social History of Medicine Dec 2008 Vol 21 Issue 3 pp 437 60 Hacker Jacob S The Historical Logic of National Health Insurance Structure and Sequence in the Development of British Canadian and U S Medical Policy Studies in American Political Development April 1998 Vol 12 Issue 1 pp 57 130 Hilton Claire 26 August 2016 Whistle blowing in the National Health Service since the 1960s History and Policy Retrieved 11 May 2017 Loudon Irvine John Horder and Charles Webster General Practice under the National Health Service 1948 1997 1998 online Rintala Marvin Creating the National Health Service Aneurin Bevan and the Medical Lords 2003 online Rivett G C From Cradle to Grave The First 50 65 Years of the NHS King s Fund London 1998 now updated to 2014 and available at www nhshistory co uk Stewart John The Political Economy of the British National Health Service 1945 1975 Opportunities and Constraints Medical History October 2008 Vol 52 Issue 4 pp 453 70 Webster Charles Conflict and Consensus Explaining the British Health Service Twentieth Century British History April 1990 Vol 1 Issue 2 pp 115 51 Webster Charles Health Services Since the War Vol 1 Problems of Health Care The National Health Service before 1957 1988 479pp onlineExternal links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to National Health Service Wikiquote has quotations related to National Health Service Official website of the NHS in England Official website of NHS Scotland Official website of NHS Wales Official website of Health and Social Care in Northern Ireland Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title National Health Service amp oldid 1134556568, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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