NHS Winter Pressures Statement The following Statement was made in
the House of Commons on Monday 9 January. “Mr Speaker, I wish to
take this first opportunity to update the House on the severe
pressures faced by the NHS since the House last met. I and the
Government regret that the experience for some patients and staff
in emergency care has not been acceptable in recent weeks. I am
sure that the whole House will join me in thanking staff in the NHS
and social...Request free trial
NHS Winter
Pressures
Statement
The following Statement was made in the House of Commons on
Monday 9 January.
“Mr Speaker, I wish to take this first opportunity to update the
House on the severe pressures faced by the NHS since the House
last met. I and the Government regret that the experience for
some patients and staff in emergency care has not been acceptable
in recent weeks. I am sure that the whole House will join me in
thanking staff in the NHS and social care who have worked
tirelessly throughout this intense period, including clinicians
in this House who have worked on wards over Christmas. They
include my honourable friend the Member for Lewes, the Minister
for Mental Health, and the honourable Member for Tooting, the
shadow Minister for Mental Health.
There is no question but that it has been an extraordinarily
difficult time for everyone in health and care. Flu has made this
winter particularly tough: first, because we are facing the worst
flu season for 10 years—the number of people in hospital with flu
this time last year was 50; this year, it is over 5,100.
Secondly, it came early and quickly, increasing sevenfold between
November and December. It also came when GPs and primary and
community care were at their most constrained. When flu affects
the population, it affects the workforce too, leading to staff
sickness absence that constrains supply just as it also increases
demand.
These flu pressures came on top of Covid. Over 9,000 people are
in hospitals with Covid, while exceptional levels of scarlet
fever activity and an increase in strep A have created further
pressure on A&E. All that comes on top of a historically high
starting point. We did not have a quiet summer, with significant
levels of Covid, and delayed discharges were more than double
what they were during the pandemic. I put that in context for the
House: in June 2020, there were just 6,000 cases per day of
delayed discharge—patients medically fit and ready to leave
hospital—whereas throughout last year the figure was between
12,000 and 13,000 per day. The scale, speed and timing of our flu
season have combined with ongoing high levels of Covid admissions
in hospital and the pandemic legacy of high delayed discharge to
put real strain on front-line services.
Since the NHS began preparing for this winter, there was a
recognition that this year had the potential to be the hardest
ever. That is why there was a specific focus on vaccination.
There were 9 million flu shots and 17 million autumn Covid
boosters. We extended eligibility more widely than in the past,
to cover the over-50s, and became the first place in the world to
have the bivalent Covid vaccine, which tackles both the omicron
and the original Covid strain.
NHS England also put in place plans for the equivalent of 7,000
additional beds, including the introduction of virtual wards of a
sort that one can see at Watford General Hospital. That
innovation is still at an early stage of development, but has the
potential to be significant in reducing pressure on bed occupancy
in hospitals; in Watford alone, it has saved the equivalent of an
extra hospital ward of patients. In addition, our plan for
patients put £500 million specifically into delayed discharge,
with a further £600 million next year and £1 billion the year
after. Although the funds are already starting to make a
difference, efforts have taken time to ramp up operationally with
local authorities and the local NHS.
In addition, our 42 integrated care boards, recognising how bed
occupancy in hospitals and social care are connected, will fully
integrate health and care in the years to come. But likewise,
they are at an early stage of maturity, with ICBs having become
fully operationalised only in July 2022, less than six months
ago.
Our plans involving the integration of hospital care and social
care, additional funding for discharge, increased step-down
capacity, the equivalent of 7,000 additional hospital beds and a
vaccination programme at scale have provided the groundwork for
the government response, but it is clear we need to do more right
now in light of the level of flu and Covid rates and given that
hospital occupancy remains far too high and emergency departments
are too congested. Recognising that, we launched the elective
recovery taskforce on 7 December, and in the coming weeks, we
will publish our urgent and emergency care recovery plans. NHS
England and the Department of Health and Social Care have been
working intensively over Christmas on these plans, which were
reviewed with health and care leaders at an NHS recovery forum in
Downing Street on Saturday.
The recovery falls into three main areas of work: first, steps to
support the system now, given the immediate pressures we face
this winter; secondly, steps to support a whole-of-system
response this year to give better resilience during the summer
and autumn—as we have seen with the heatwave this summer and with
the levels of Covid, pressure is now sustained throughout the
year, not just, as in the past, during autumn and winter—and,
thirdly, our work alongside those two areas on prevention, on
maximising the step change potential of proven technologies, such
as virtual wards, and on the wider adoption of innovations such
as operational control centres and machine reading software to
treat more conditions in the community, away from someone
reaching an emergency department in the first place.
Let me first set out the measures I can announce today to provide
support to the NHS and local authorities now. First, we will
block-book beds in residential homes to enable some 2,500 people
to be released from hospitals when they are medically fit to be
discharged. When that is combined with the ramping up of the £500
million discharge funding, which will unblock an estimated 1,000
to 2,000 delayed discharge cases, capacity on wards will be freed
up, which will in turn enable patients admitted by emergency
departments to move to wards, which in turn unblocks ambulance
delays. It is important, however, that we learn from the
deployment of a similar approach during the pandemic by ensuring
that the right wraparound care is provided for patients released
to residential care. I have asked NHS England to particularly
focus on that, so that it is the shortest possible stay on
patients’ journey home and into domiciliary care, and indeed it
is in the NHS’s own interests for those stays to be as short as
possible. Taken together, this is a £200 million investment over
the next three months.
Next, our A&Es are also under particular strain. From my
visits across the country I have seen and heard how they often
need more space to enable same- day emergency care and short
stays post emergency care. Our second investment is in more
physical capacity in and around emergency departments. By using
modular units, this capacity will be available in weeks, not
months, and our £50 million investment will focus on modular
support this year. We will apply funding from next year’s
allocation to significantly expand the programme ahead of the
summer. We are giving trusts discretion on how best to use these
units to decompress their emergency departments. It might be for
spaces for short stays post A&E care, where there is no need
for a patient to go to a ward for further observation, or for
discharge lounges that previously have not been able to take
patients in a bed—many of those are often simply chairs—or for
additional capacity alongside the emergency department at the
front end of the hospital.
The third action we are taking to support the system right now is
to free up front-line staff from being diverted by Care Quality
Commission inspections over the coming weeks, and the CQC has
agreed to reduce inspections and to focus on high-risk providers
in other settings, such as mental health. Those are the actions
we are taking that will have an immediate effect.
I turn to the measures we are taking now that will give greater
resilience into the summer and next winter. We now have 42 NHS
system control centres in operation across England, staffed 24
hours a day, seven days a week, tracking patients on their
journey through hospitals, helping us to identify blockages
earlier and getting flow through the system. Where we have
implemented these systems, such as the one I saw in operation in
Maidstone, they have had a clear impact. We will therefore
allocate funding in next year’s settlement to apply these systems
more widely.
Similarly, we have also seen how the use of artificial
intelligence and data can demonstrably reduce demand and release
patients sooner. NHS England has been tasked with clarifying and
simplifying the procurement landscape, taking on board best
international practice, so that a small number of scalable
interventions are taken forward where international experience
shows they can deliver meaningful benefits to patients.
Next, we will capitalise on the incredible potential of virtual
wards. Last week at Watford General Hospital, I saw how patients
who would have been in hospital beds were treated at home through
a combination of technology and wraparound care. Patients
released sooner are often much happier, knowing that they are
receiving clinical supervision and always have the safety net of
being able to quickly return to hospital should their condition
deteriorate. There is scope to expand these measures to many more
conditions and many more hospitals in the months ahead.
We are also opening up more routes for NHS patients to get free
treatment in the independent sector and offering even greater
patient choice. The elective recovery taskforce is helping us to
find spare operating theatres, hospital beds and out-patient
capacity.
We must also take steps in primary care. We are clear that our
community pharmacists can support many more things to ease
pressure on general practice. From the end of March, community
pharmacists will take referrals from urgent and emergency care
settings; later this year, they will also start offering oral
contraception services. But I want to do even more, as they do in
Scotland, and work with community pharmacists to tackle barriers
to offering more services, including how to better use digital
services. The primary care recovery plan will set out a range of
additional services that pharmacists can deliver.
Finally, notwithstanding very severe pressures, we know that to
break the cycle of the NHS repeatedly coming under severe
pressure, the best way to reduce the numbers coming through our
front doors is to address problems away from the emergency
department. On Friday, we signed a memorandum of understanding
with BioNTech—a global leader in mRNA technology —to bring
vaccine research to this country, which will give as many as
10,000 UK patients early access to trials for personalised cancer
therapies by 2030. This builds on the 10-year partnership we
struck with Moderna in December to also invest in mRNA research
and development in the UK and build state-of-the-art vaccine
manufacturing here.
We are also reviewing our wider care for frail, elderly patients
in care homes long before they ever get to A&E or our
hospitals. Take the brilliant work being done in Tees Valley,
where community teams are being used to help with falls to
prevent unnecessary ambulance trips to hospitals. We have looked
at what more support we can offer elderly patients further
upstream. With an ageing population, and many more people with
more than one condition, it is clear that we have to treat
patients earlier in the community and go beyond individual
specialties to better reflect patients with multiple conditions
to give the right support to people where they are, which is
often at home or in residential homes.
Today’s announcement provides a further £250 million of funding,
which recognises the spike in flu on top of Covid admissions and
high delayed discharge numbers from the pandemic. The funding
will provide immediate support to reduce hospital bed occupancy
and decompress A&E pressures, and, in turn, unlock
much-needed ambulance handovers. This funding builds on the £500
million announced in the Autumn Statement specifically for
discharge, which is ramping up, and the additional funding for
next year.
All this work ultimately builds on the much-needed greater
integration of health and social care through the 42 integrated
care boards, which we will strengthen through the Hewitt review,
and through a step change in capability, including operational
control centres.
This immediate and near-term action sits in parallel with our
wider life science investment, such as the deals with BioNTech
and Moderna, and underscores our commitment to recognising the
immediate pressures on the NHS and investing in the science that
will shift the dial on earlier, upstream treatment at scale,
particularly for the frail elderly, long before a patient reaches
an emergency department. This is a comprehensive package of
measures, and I commend this Statement to the House.”
3.19pm
(Lab)
My Lords, from this Statement one might conclude that the NHS is
facing challenges but that, overall, things are moving in the
right direction. This could not be further from the truth and
does not reflect how dire the situation has become. It is clear
that the Government have failed to grasp what everyone else has
managed to: that there is a deeply urgent crisis in health and
social care, where irrevocable damage is being done to people’s
lives.
While on the one hand the Government are bringing in legislation
that will mean that NHS staff can be sacked for exercising their
right to strike, on the other they are refusing to conduct
meaningful pay negotiations that could end the strikes in the
health service. Indeed, they only thought to convene an NHS
recovery forum this week, when we are already half way through
the winter.
It is increasingly becoming clear that the sporadic pots of money
proposed as sticking plasters for various pinch points are not
being deployed quickly enough. For instance, the £500 million
emergency adult social care discharge fund was announced in
September, but some half of it still has not yet reached the
front line. The NHS has now said that it is too late to make a
difference to the winter crisis. Has the Minister identified what
is stopping the funding coming through? What plans are in place
to deal with this so that funding can promptly get to where it is
needed? It is no good making announcements and then not following
through.
Nor is it easy enough to work out whether funding is new or
recycled money. I hope the Minister will be able to clarify this
now and in the future. The nature of this Government’s approach
to funding health and care—half a billion pounds here one week,
another few million there—gives the impression of knee-jerk
reactions rather than strategic policy-making. In fact, the
approach is so last minute that, after making the announcements
in yesterday’s Statement, an extra £50 million was suddenly found
and a further press release was issued.
Yet we know that prevention is better than cure in every sense. A
GP appointment costs the taxpayer much less than a desperate
patient turning up at A&E. Is the Minister content with this
eternal hole plugging? What plans are there to move towards a
more holistic and sensible long-term approach, including plans to
fix primary care so that patients can see the GP they want in the
manner they choose? What plans are there to recruit the care
workers needed to care for patients once they have been
discharged from hospitals, and to pay them fairly so that we do
not lose them to other employers? As ever, where is the
comprehensive and detailed workforce plan to train the doctors,
nurses and health professionals that the NHS so desperately
needs?
Underlying this has been an abject failure to make the social
care system sustainable. Half a million people are waiting for
social care assessments. They clearly are at major risk of having
to be admitted to hospital as a result. How will the Minister
work to prevent this, especially when care workers are leaving in
droves to work in retail and other sectors? Is there a government
target for when the number of people waiting for assessments,
often in pain and discomfort, might finally start to come
down?
The Statement cites Covid, flu, strep A, scarlet fever, and even
CQC inspections as reasons why the NHS is under such strain. Is
this not surely passing the buck, when other countries face
similar challenges and yet are not gripped by such chronic crises
every single winter?
In the context of an ageing population where demand on the system
will only increase, is the Minister willing to assure your
Lordships’ House that a sustainable social care solution will
finally be produced before the next winter hits? The NHS
Confederation has responded to yesterday’s Statement by
referencing the obvious contained in the Government’s words on
the need for
“the right wraparound care for those being discharged from
hospital”.
The NHS Confederation also says that
“after a decade of austerity neither the social care sector nor
the government are in any position to ensure it.”
Does the Minister agree with that analysis: that it is the
choices of this Government over the past 12 years that have had a
direct and devastating impact on the current delays? It is this
fundamental that the Statement has failed to address.
(LD)
My Lords, we welcome the fact that the Government are making a
Statement, as it is abundantly clear to everyone that we have a
crisis on our hands, and we on these Benches have been calling
for this to be recognised as a national major incident. In that
context, will the Minister clarify the status of the NHS recovery
forum that was announced with great fanfare last week? Was it a
one-off, or will it be meeting regularly and taking ownership of
this crisis? If it is not the NHS recovery forum, what group
within government will be taking us through the rest of the
winter? This requires daily, serious leadership at the highest
levels in government.
I have three questions on the specific measures outlined in the
Statement. First, the Government have told us about the
block-booking of care home beds, which should provide some
immediate relief for hospitals, but they are much less clear on
how they plan to increase domiciliary care so that people who can
and should be in their own homes do not get stuck in care homes
unnecessarily. The last thing we want to do is to move people out
of one inappropriate care setting into another one, and
domiciliary care remains the key to providing the best care for
the vast majority of people who need neither hospital nor
permanent care home residency. Can the Minister offer us any
assurances on what the Government intend to do about domiciliary
care provision?
Secondly, the Statement referred to the new NHS system control
centres that will be in each integrated care board area, and
which are a welcome development. There is published information
about the data that will go into these new centres, but no
information about what the centres themselves will make available
to the public. Does the Minister agree that it would be helpful
for people to know much more about the pressures on the NHS in
their local area through these NHS system control centres
publishing regular updates with as much information as they can
provide to help patients make informed choices, with full
knowledge of where the blockages are in the system?
Finally, the Statement referred to the use of artificial
intelligence systems to help release patients sooner and track
their progress through hospitals. There have been recent press
reports about Welsh hospitals using tools developed by a British
company called Faculty AI to improve patient discharges. Can the
Minister add any insights into how these and similar technologies
are going to be tested and deployed in England? I know that
nothing is a silver bullet, but the reports suggest that they
could make a significant difference to discharging people more
efficiently and quickly. If that is so, we do not need to wait to
deploy these technologies, and should be getting on with it.
The Parliamentary Under-Secretary of State, Department of Health
and Social Care () (Con)
My Lords, I thank noble Lords for their comments. As I mentioned
in answering the previous Question, this is a reflection, from
our part, of trying to understand the situation. We did some
plans in October and looked at demand and supply, and that led us
to make the announcements about the 7,000 extra beds and the £500
million adult social care discharge fund. It was clear to us that
the bed occupancy issue was going to be at those danger points,
and that was the plan.
Then, of course, as with any plan, you amend and review it all
the time. Over the last few weeks of December, with the onset of
flu beforehand, it became clear that we had higher levels of bed
occupancy than we had planned for at that time because we had
7,000 or so extra beds taken up by flu while, at the same time,
still requiring higher levels of Covid care than planned. It
became clear from all this that the bed occupancy levels were
still too high to be comfortable. This was causing the knock-on
impact on the flow across the whole system, backing right up into
the A&E wait times. That is why, very responsibly, we looked
at the latest data, planned, and realised that we needed to do
more. That was very much the components of the plan.
In answer to the point from the noble Baroness, Lady Merron, some
of those short-term measures were about bringing in extra adult
social care funding packages and, candidly, looking within every
area of our budgets at what we really needed to spend over the
rest of the year and at what we could prioritise. We managed to
make some in-year savings through reducing headcount,
particularly in admin and central areas, and then looked to
redeploy that to make sure it was going to the front line.
As well as that, we looked at things such as the expandable
modular space. This goes back to the flight control systems,
which I would recommend to anyone. It is well worth a visit to
Maidstone, where you will see what we plan for the longer term
and what we are looking to do across the system in time for next
winter. It became very clear there that, because it has the data,
it can manage demand and supply. It sees the incoming from the
ambulances; it sees the bed situation; it sees those people who
are getting close to be ready for discharge. It is working with
clinicians to say, “Actually, we’ve got some incoming and we need
to free up that space. Let’s get the social care places ready.
Let’s have transport ready and clean the bed quickly.” It is
absolutely those micro-improvements and the Team Sky cycling-type
approach that address it. AI comes in very much as part of that;
you can speed up the flow all the time. It is not silver bullet
stuff, but it is about looking at those micro-improvements as you
go through it. That is very much the background to all this.
Dom care is an important aspect of that as well. I went through
the stats with the team today, which said that of the 13,000
people ready for discharge, probably only 3% should require
social care in the long term, and the other 97% should be in a
home environment. Some of them might need a few weeks, which is
where those care packages come in, and a lot of them need dom
care, but 97% of them should not be in care going forward. That
is why we need to focus these things towards that. That is the
thinking behind this.
The modular space is an important component of this. Look at
Maidstone again; it has looked very carefully at the patient
flows and at where you can have same-day emergency care and get
people out again so that they never have to go into a hospital.
But you need extra space to do that. We have made this available
so that the hospitals can decide where they most need that
expandable space—whether it is pre-A&E, when they are
finished in A&E and waiting in a decent space for a bed to
come free, or step-down or discharge areas. It is about providing
that flexibility and putting it in place quickly for them
all.
What we were trying to do here was show flexibility and be fleet
of foot to be able to course correct as time goes on; to put our
hands up and notice when things were difficult and more
challenging because bed occupancy was higher than expected—as I
say, due to flu, Covid and other factors—and put in the measures
to address them. That is exactly what we are doing in the short
term.
In the longer term, next year—not that many people would say that
nine or 10 months away is the longer term—we need to make sure
that adult social care has further funding, as the House has
heard me say many times. There will be a substantial increase
next year, up to £1.7 billion, and a substantial increase the
year after, of up to 20%. With flight control systems, expandable
modular care and the rollout of virtual wards, we have a number
of things that, on their own, are not a silver bullet, but, by
putting them all together, you will start to get the changes and
improvements that we expect to see. I say unashamedly that, if
there are other facilities in the independent sector that we can
make use of, be it making more use of pharmacies or expanding
virtual wards, then we should do so.
I am sure there will be more questions as we go on in this
debate, but I hope your Lordships can see that we have tried to
respond to the challenges through a range of measures that we
believe will make a difference. At the same time, we must be open
to the need to do more; we will need to add more things and
course correct as time goes on.
3.35pm
(CB)
The Minister may not agree, but the NHS is in crisis. He may say
that the situation is “challenging”, but it could not be more
challenging. Although infection rates related to Covid, flu and
other infections may have exacerbated the situation, the genesis
of the crisis is not of today’s making. It has been in the making
for years. It is related to lack of capacity. Does he agree that
the emergency measures now being put in place are not likely to
work? If they are not likely to work, what is plan B?
Importantly, what is the long-term plan to ensure that this does
not continue into the spring, summer or next winter?
(Con)
I absolutely think these measures will improve the situation; I
would not be putting them forward if I did not believe that. At
the same time, just as we put out plans in October and are
amending them now, I will continue to amend our plans. I think
that is a flexible, responsible approach: you have a plan, you
adapt that plan, you invest and you continue to improve. That is
what we will continue to see and do; we will see those
improvements go through this year and into the next.
(Non-Afl)
My Lords, my noble friend the Minister mentioned pharmacies in
his response, which clearly demonstrated a complete lack of
understanding of the crisis that is going on in the independent
pharmacy sector. They are closing at an alarming rate, yet they
are the front line of the NHS, with record numbers of people
coming to see them for free medical advice because they cannot
get in to see their GP. There is a very serious crisis in the
independent pharmacy sector, which is vital for healthcare. I
have had many meetings, I have had letters, and I have got a
campaign going in the media. It is clear from the responses that
the department does not have a clue about the extent of the
crisis and the closure of these independent pharmacies. Something
needs to be done before they all close.
(Con)
I wholeheartedly agree with my noble friend that the pharmacies
are the front line. We realise that they have been underutilised
in the past. Actually, the plan of using them more for patients
will put more funding their way, which I hope will support them,
just as allocating Covid vaccinations to many pharmacies provided
support. I hope my noble friend will see that this plan should
add to the viability of a number of pharmacies by putting more
business their way. They are a crucial part of the front
line.
(Lab)
My Lords, this focus on the number of hospital beds may be at the
wrong end. It is much more fruitful to think about why staff are
so dissatisfied and unhappy that they wish to leave and do so in
droves. We have to do more to improve the morale of the nursing
and medical professions and, in particular, those who work in the
community—the care workers. We are losing them in great numbers;
they are not coping. The reason is partly their pay, and we must
pay them a reasonable rate, but it is also that they are
completely disillusioned as people do not take them seriously.
They do not have a professional qualification or a proper
training programme. They do not have the possibility of career
progression. We must do more to encourage them and ensure that
they have a satisfactory career. If we do, we could possibly get
more patients out of those beds that were building up, and
perhaps help reduce the queues of ambulances.
(Con)
I agree that we need a whole-system approach. Workforce is a key
part of that, including the adult social care workforce. Again,
as all noble Lords did, I welcome the advent of the agreement to
do a workforce plan, which needs to take all these factors into
account. We need to make sure that it is an attractive place to
work, and that people see it as a career progression—and that it
is modular so that you can start in social care and, if you want
to, progress into other parts of the health service.
(LD)
My Lords, I declare my interest as a vice-president of the LGA
and vice-chair of the All-Party Group on Adult Social Care.
Nearly three years ago, the Government created Nightingale
hospitals, which were much vaunted and had millions spent on
them. Virtually all of them were useless because there was no
staffing available for them at short notice. I listened to the
question from the noble Baroness, Lady Merron, about the short,
medium and long-term workforce plan. We are now in emergency
time: there are 160,000 social care vacancies and 40,000 nursing
vacancies, which includes those in social care. How is this
unblocking of beds going to be staffed and by when?
(Con)
Obviously, prior to this, we were in touch with the adult social
care sector to make sure that there was that capacity within the
system for it. We have been assured that the capacity exists, but
we wholeheartedly agree that we need to recruit the staff to fill
those vacancies, which is why we have taken measures to recruit
internationally as well as in the domestic recruitment programme.
Those are all key components of the longer-term plan to solve
this issue.
(CB)
My Lords, I remind noble Lords of my declared interest as
chairman of the King’s Fund. The Statement made yesterday in the
other place refers to a primary care recovery plan. It is well
recognised that the hospital system is not sustainable if primary
care cannot discharge its important gatekeeper function. Is the
Minister able to confirm that, as part of that plan, there will
be a radical review of options that might be adopted to ensure
that primary care can deliver its important function?
(Con)
Yes, this is very much the focus of my colleague Minister
O’Brien. I think it is understood that as many as half of the
people who turn to up to A&E could have been looked after by
the primary care system, so a lot of the pressures caused are as
a result of that. It is absolutely a whole-system problem; many
of the issues at the front end are about the GPs and at the back
end they are about adult social care, which is why we need to
address the whole system.
(Con)
My Lords, last month, I had the dubious privilege of staying at
one of the Minister’s hospitals. I was struck by the sclerotic
way in which decisions were taken. It seems that the whole
premium is on safety rather than looking after the patient. I
would ask that the department looks into the way in which
decisions are made, because I found far too often that a decision
was made on the basis of what was safest. The multidisciplinary
team, as it was called, was basically there to deflect anyone who
wanted to do anything very adventurous. Will the Minister start
looking, maybe in selected hospitals, at ways in which the
decision-making and care process can be speeded up and made less
sclerotic?
(Con)
I have seen very good examples of where that works. You have
clinicians in the room with the data—the management and bed
information. They make decisions according to the flow and number
of people who they see are going to need a bed from the
ambulances and the A&E situation, and the number who are
ready to release. You have clinicians united with the information
to make good decisions. Those are the best. The idea with the
longer-term plan is to make sure those “best” have the tools in
terms of the flight control system and have management processes
in place so that they can adopt and follow best practice. It is
key to what we are looking to make sure we have in place in time
for next year, as the noble Baroness, Lady Merron, mentioned.
(GP)
My Lords, the Minister replied to my Written Question on 5
January about commercial companies promoting strep A tests. The
Answer said that these are “not currently recommended” by
NICE
“for individuals aged five years old and over … with a sore
throat”
and that UKHSA is conducting a
“bedside review of existing antigen-based lateral flow
devices”
to
“identify the tests that are most likely to perform well”.
Given that, can the Minister explain why I have a number of
emails from DAM Health headed “Concerned about strep A? Order
your home test kit today. Only £12.99 per test kit. Quick and
reliable results within minutes”? Can the Minister truly put his
hand on his heart and say there is sufficient regulation and
oversight of private testing companies, and indeed the broader
private health sector? Is it not profiteering from the crisis in
the NHS, potentially damaging the NHS and putting more pressure
on NHS services?
(Con)
First, I declare an interest in this space. As many noble Lords
will know, I set up a Covid testing company which never did any
business towards the Government; I am very pleased to say that it
served only the private sector. I am disposing of it as part of
my obligations as a Minister. As the question relates to testing,
I am quite keen to put that on the record.
Secondly, I would say “absolutely”. Dare I say it, but the reason
my company was so successful is that we set the very highest
standards according to the regulators. That is why we were able
to win the crème de la crème—the Formula 1s and Wimbledons of the
world. I cannot speak for other companies which may not be taking
that high level of support, but there is absolutely a role for
the regulator to make sure that only effective tests are marketed
and those which are not effective should not.
(Lab)
My Lords, I wonder whether the Minister—I hate to say this—will
recognise that, too often, it feels that the Government have no
institutional memory, have no ability to learn from what has
happened in the past and keep trying to reinvent the wheel while
the wheels are spinning away long before they get anywhere near.
The King’s Fund recently published a report on how the last
Labour Government brought down waiting lists. That report shows
that you do not just have to shout about it; you have to put in
place all the different steps, including the right financial
flow.
From all that has been said today, it is clear that the right
flow is to encourage more people into social care work and
encourage and enable them to do more serious, high-level work
like urine testing. The Government have not even begun to think
about this. Until financial support for the whole flow and the
financial incentives to change the things the Government need to
change are there, and that is understood by Ministers, we will
not get it. It is not enough to say, “We’re putting another £15
million or £50 million into this, that or the other”, without
making sure that you know how it is going to be spent and that
people are going to be there to deliver it.
(Con)
I have said before in this Chamber —and I will say it again—that
we should be learning all lessons. I like to think that, three
months into my role, I am learning some of those lessons. The
noble Baroness will see that we have taken some backwards steps
on the use of the independent sector, which, again, was pioneered
15 or 20 years ago, but hopefully we will move forward again. I
unashamedly say that we can learn from those things. I have
spoken to some colleagues from the noble Baroness’s side of the
House, and will continue to, because I will adopt anything that
works, and I agree that payment by results is one of those
things. We can speak after these questions; my door is definitely
open on those matters.
(LD)
My Lords, I have the privilege to chair the NHS national
community nursing plan clinical reference group. We meet on a
regular basis and look at how community nurses can keep people
out of hospital and get people home from hospital. We have heard
very little about that today. Can I have five or 10 minutes with
the Minister at some stage to bring him up to speed on the work
that is going on?
(Con)
As with my answer to the previous question, I look forward to
that meeting and learning everything we can. I will repeat the
statistics on that subject that struck me most: of those 13,000
people who are fit to be discharged, we think that only 3% need
to be in social care in the long term; 97% could be at home,
which is the best and most cost-effective place for them. We need
to ensure that the support is in place to ensure that that option
exists.
(CB)
My Lords, I declare my interests as a nurse and as a new
appointment to the NHS England board as a non-executive director.
There are two things missing from this discussion. First, there
has been no reference to people waiting for mental health
support. How can we ensure that people in mental health crisis
are moved rapidly out of busy A&Es to be supported in quieter
environments? There is a very good example across the road, at St
Thomas’ Hospital, which is helping the A&E. Secondly, it is
high time that we seriously consider giving full-time contracts
to care workers in domiciliary services, because, as soon as
somebody goes into hospital, the care worker’s hours are cut and,
although they know that individual, they very rarely get
reallocated to them when they are transferred back out of
hospital. The lack of continuity of care often results in
readmission, so what will the Minister do to ensure that, in the
way that the noble Lord, , just outlined, we improve
the lot of those particular care workers?
(Con)
First, I welcome the noble Baroness to the NHS England board,
with high expectation of the value that she will add to it. I am
very interested to understand her point further; I will speak to
Minister Whately about that and respond to the noble Baroness in
writing. Where people have knowledge of a patient at home, they
can add that to their care when they come back out again.
(Con)
My Lords, one of the lessons we learned, sometimes very
painfully, during the earlier stages of the pandemic was the
importance of working with, and often through, local government
to tackle some of these issues. The same is true now. Would my
noble friend explain how the NHS will use discharge funding and
purchase social care provision? Will integrated care boards do
that locally with local government, which has been managing
social care purchasing for decades?
(Con)
I thank my noble friend. The best ICBs that I have seen have the
local authority as part of their board and their decision-making
on a day in, day out basis. One of the best control systems that
I saw in an ICB actually had the local authority social care
people in the room making the decisions with them, so they are a
key element in all of this. On purchasing and funding, they are
very much a strong player.
(Lab)
The Government have spent 13 years cutting the number of beds and
they are now reversing that and starting to increase it, which is
welcome. The other thing that they have done is to constrain pay
in the NHS and social care. They have an opportunity to do
something about that. Why are they not taking the opportunity to
boost pay in both those sectors to address some of the problems
that we face?
(Con)
I welcome what I hope, over the past few days, has been better
mood music—let me put it that way—in this space. I hope from the
different things that we see that we will get closer towards a
landing zone where we can reach agreement going forward. We know
from both sides that neither side wants to be in this dispute. My
hope very much is that constructively—with good will on both
sides, which we are seeing—we will find a way forward.
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