Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Dedication
- Contents
- List of figures and tables
- Notes on contributors
- Foreword
- 1 The NHS at 75: an unfolding story
- 2 NHS governance: the centre claims authority
- 3 Health and care funding at 75
- 4 The devolved nations
- 5 NHS at 75: general practice through the lens of access
- 6 NHS hospitals and the bedpan doctrine: the first 75 years
- 7 Quality and the NHS: fair-weather friends or a longstanding relationship?
- 8 Improving health and tackling health inequalities: what role for the NHS?
- 9 NHS managers at a crossroads: part of the problem or the solution?
- 10 Forgotten, neglected and a poor relation? Reflecting on the 75th anniversary of adult social care
- 11 The NHS at 75 in comparative perspective
- 12 Our NHS? The changing involvement of patients and the public in England’s health and care system
- 13 After 75 years, whither the NHS? Some conclusions
- Index
1 - The NHS at 75: an unfolding story
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 03 April 2024
- Frontmatter
- Dedication
- Contents
- List of figures and tables
- Notes on contributors
- Foreword
- 1 The NHS at 75: an unfolding story
- 2 NHS governance: the centre claims authority
- 3 Health and care funding at 75
- 4 The devolved nations
- 5 NHS at 75: general practice through the lens of access
- 6 NHS hospitals and the bedpan doctrine: the first 75 years
- 7 Quality and the NHS: fair-weather friends or a longstanding relationship?
- 8 Improving health and tackling health inequalities: what role for the NHS?
- 9 NHS managers at a crossroads: part of the problem or the solution?
- 10 Forgotten, neglected and a poor relation? Reflecting on the 75th anniversary of adult social care
- 11 The NHS at 75 in comparative perspective
- 12 Our NHS? The changing involvement of patients and the public in England’s health and care system
- 13 After 75 years, whither the NHS? Some conclusions
- Index
Summary
Introduction
In its 75th year, despite the hallowed role that the NHS plays in the UK national psyche, the NHS found itself in a parlous position. Across a range of measures, the NHS was facing unprecedented pressures in 2023. First, public satisfaction with the NHS had fallen to its lowest recorded level – 29 per cent, falling 7 percentage points from 2021. Equally significant was the level of dissatisfaction with the NHS, at 51 per cent (Morris et al, 2023). Second, waiting lists were at an all-time high of 7.2 million (as of December 2022). Much of this can be explained by delayed care due to COVID-19 (a rise of 2 million since the start of the pandemic). This was despite the ‘elective recovery plan’ published in 2022 (NHS England, 2022). Third, there were 133,000 (full-time equivalent) vacancies in the NHS in September 2022, a vacancy rate of 9.7 per cent (Health Foundation, 2022). Vacancies in social care stood at 165,000, a vacancy rate of 10.7 per cent (King’s Fund, 2023). Fourth, there was a wave of strikes among NHS staff. Members of the Royal College of Nursing went on strike for the first time in their history. They were joined by ambulance staff and junior doctors. NHS consultants had also voted for strike action. Fifth, while pay can explain some of the causes of these strikes, it is likely that high levels of stress and burnout were also significant factors. The 2022 NHS Staff Survey (published in March 2023) indicated that 45 per cent of staff were unwell due to work-related stress and 57 per cent had come to work despite feeling unwell. Overall, 34 per cent of staff felt burnout, with ambulance staff being especially prone (49 per cent) (Nuffield Trust, 2023).
The conditions prevailing in 2023 were the confluence of factors in the previous several years – financial austerity from 2010, the Brexit referendum vote in 2016 (and the consequent impact upon recruitment and retention of staff and pharmaceuticals) and COVID-19 pandemic (from March 2020). Arguably, the conditions were also the result of the NHS’ politics, policies and organisational structure over the previous 75 years. So it is timely to reassess the contribution and state of the NHS in the past, in the present and in the future.
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- Information
- The NHS at 75The State of UK Health Policy, pp. 1 - 20Publisher: Bristol University PressPrint publication year: 2023