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Funding forecast is colder than ever

Tags: A   Efficiency   HIS   iS   King's Fund   Nicholson   Office   Productivity   statistics   Treasury   UK  

20 Jul 2009

The NHS would have to make historically unprecedented productivity gains to close the gap between its likely funding after 2011 and the Wanless projections of its future spending needs.

According to a report by the King’s Fund and the Institute for Fiscal Studies, the health service would need to make gains of between 3.4% and 7.4%– or £3.6 billion and £7.8 billion – a year from 2011-12 to 2016-17 to close the gap.

By contrast, the latest figures from the Office of National Statistics should that between 1997 and 2007, the productivity of the UK NHS fell by 4.3%; an average reduction of 4.3% a year.

“The scale of what is about to hit the health care system is unprecedented,” said King’s Fund chief executive Niall Dickson. “The politicians may want to talk about protecting the NHS, but the reality is that even with some protection there will have to be very tough choices.

“There is an opportunity now to improve efficiency but if the NHS doesn’t tackle this head on we will once again see the vultures circling, questioning whether we can sustain a free comprehensive system funded out of general taxation.”

The latest analysis from the King’s Fund and the IFS draws up three spending scenarios for the NHS that it terms ‘tepid’, ‘cold’ and ‘arctic.’

Under the tepid scenario, the NHS would rise by 2% a year in real terms for the first three years under review and 3% for the final two years. Under the tepid and arctic scenarios, spending would be frozen or fall by 2% and then1% over the same period.

The analysts warn that adopting any of these scenarios would require cuts in other Whitehall budgets or significant income tax or VAT increases. They warn that even the most optimistic scenario would be largely wiped out by the impact of demographic change on the UK.

Additionally, they say all of the scenarios would fall short of the funding that former Nat West chief executive Derek Wanless told the Treasury the NHS would need in 2002.

Wanless drew up three scenarios for future health service spending, which made different assumptions about the degree to which it could become more efficient and the degree to which population health could improve.

His work was a major stimulus to NHS IT, since many of his productivity improvements were underpinned by greater use of technology in the health service. One reason that the NHS has failed to reach his most optimistic, ‘fully engaged’ scenario is that it has failed to roll out IT as anticipated.

Equally, a shortfall in future funding against his scenarios implies less money for NHS IT in the future. The Treasury and health service leaders are also pinning their hopes on IT-led improvements to NHS productivity to maintain quality in the tougher financial climate ahead.

The King’s Fund and IFS analysts calculate the gap between NHS funding and the Wanless scenarios will range from £4 billion to £40 billion by 2016-17. NHS chief executive David Nicholson’s has already warned that the NHS will need to make productivity improvements of £15-£20 billion over the period in question.

Report co-author John Appleby, chief economist at The King’s Fund, said: “The NHS has enjoyed unprecedented increases in funding since the turn of the century but those days will soon be over.

"That’s why it’s crucial that the service does all it can over the next two years to prepare itself for the financial freeze that will take hold over the two coming spending review periods.”

Link: How cold will it be? Prospects for NHS funding 2011-17.

Lyn Whitfield

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© 2009 E-HEALTH-MEDIA LTD. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

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1

Here we go again - and how do you measure productivity?

maryhawking@tigers.demon.co.uk

20 Jul 09 20:02

I cannot remember a time when my local health economy has not been in financial crisis! We're still below "fair shares" - but that doesn't appear to be the problem. There is a clear determination on all sides (except GPs and Community!) that any additional funds available should be directed to secondary care - just look at the way hospitals are allows to manipulate PbR (a blog on HSJ calls this "Patients bring Revenue". Spot-on!) So I suppose I can look forwards to the level of district nursing being reduced still further, more unfunded work being imposed on General Practice - and Balanced Score Cards - which include unscheduled admission rates - being used to "performance manage" GPs - with the ultimate sanction of terminating contracts which - as Kenneth Clarke established - are no more than gentlemanly agreements - and one side is not a gentleman!? When it comes to productivity, how much influence does the EWTD have on the figures? After all, if the hours of junior doctors are reduced from 96 to 48 hours per week, it seems unlikely that they would be able to be as productive - and what is the "product" being measured? Time? Activity? Pointless forms filled? Is this a case of knowing the cost of everything - and the value of nothing?


2

prioritising funds

mr.acute.cio@live.co.uk

21 Jul 09 12:12

Where does the NPfIT sit regarding the prioritising of funds.  The actual LSP systems may be free to Trusts but implementing them certainly isn't.  Besides infrastructure costs there are the actual costs of project management, implementation, integration, training and back-fill. These all fall on the user organisations and are substantial beyond usual annual running and investment funds. 

 

So now that LSP acute systems are available to use, I wonder if we will be able to implemet them, or will those monies be diverted to front-line clinical services.  


3

LSP Funding

24 Jul 09 14:06

"So now that LSP acute systems are available to use, I wonder if we will be able to implemet them, or will those monies be diverted to front-line clinical services. " 

It depends on where you are if LSP solutions are avaialble to use.... it also depends on what you mean by "use", nice ornament in the corner of the office, taking up space where an in tray could be,  Lorenzo Regional Care is still doing a great impression of Big Foot, some claim to have seen it, but it is still a myth, there again I dont suppose you can kill something until you know it exists.

There is another issue here, with funding being predicted to be difficult and some LSPs have still not delivered, if the funding for NPfIT is cut, where do those Trusts who have not migrated stand? Do they have to muddle through with exising systems or will ASCC become the rebranded NPfIT, which will means that trusts have to fund their own IT requirements from smaller budgets... unless of course the Trusts receive a refund from the money taken from them to pay for NPfIT.... or would that count as additional funding?

G

 


4

Wanless expenditure largely wasted

25 Jul 09 21:50

We keep getting told that the investments that Wanless brought unprecedented increases in funding, yet they were applied with such strings attached and, in my view, by nonsensical methods, that the money has been largely squandered.

The concept of PFI was clearly going to bleed money out of the public sector, and mortgage the future of the service. Where is it least possible to flex the system for new ways of working ? Where PFI contracts are in place.

On IT, the outsource everything, even design, to the private sector has been a resounding failure, with piteous progress to show for it. It is claimed the suppliers have only been paid for what they've delivered, but as the NHS owns none of it, pointless reworking costs us dearly.

eg: Having invested heavily in a datacentre for Fujitsu in the South, another one is now being built/expanded for BT to take over. And a massive rework of the Radiology/PACS installations to move from one to the other. It does not even seem that the design failures around sharing records are being fixed in the process.

Before NPfIT we knew how to procure, but accessing the money was always the greatest difficulty. CfH had the money, and in my view squandered the opportunity. We are now back to austerity, worse prepared, because the blight on local progress denied us the chance to pursue the significant incremental changes that pre-date NPfIT. And with all the new inflexibilities too.

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