Please see below the checked against delivery version of
the Health and Social Care Secretary speech at the NHS Providers
Conference, 16 November 2022
"Good morning everyone,
A lot has clearly happened since the last NHS Providers
conference took place including, of course, several changes of
Secretary of State.
And I know that might not matter to everyone as ministers change
but I wanted to start by assuring you that the challenges that
you are facing are uppermost in the thinking of this Government.
And having previously held roles in Number 10, Cabinet Office and
the Treasury, one of the things that I can bring to this role, is
making sure on your behalf, that the very real challenges you
face are given the upmost visibility in the Department’s
discussions with the centre of the Government.
And in contrast to what some of you might have read in the papers
last weekend, I have been very clear in setting out the extent of
those challenges in shaping the context of the Chancellor’s
statement to the House tomorrow.
I’m really looking forward to working with colleagues here and
across health and social care sector, which is an important part
of all of our family story, and I am no exception in that.
My first memory was when my Mum was doing cleaning work in a
caring home and I went along, and one of the things I remember so
well is the kindness of the residents who used to treat me to
lots of biscuits as a very little child, and treated me so well
when I was there.
And that kind and caring environment has always stuck and stayed
with me.
I believe that in explaining how that has manifested itself, it
is far better to show and not tell.
For any that care to look at my record during four years on the
Public Accounts Committee, you will see that I was a strong
champion for NHS staff who raised issues of patient safety.
Because I’ve always felt very strongly that listening to, and
learning from, staff is critical to improving outcomes for
patients.
Fiscal statement
I know that I am speaking against an extremely difficult
backdrop.
We are all conscious of the fiscal statement from the Chancellor,
and the wider economic challenges caused by two “once in a
hundred year” events – happening within the space of three years
in the form of the pandemic and the war in Ukraine.
And that places constraints on pay and creates the backdrop of
industrial action, along with the pressure you face as local
leaders.
In these difficult times, I am extremely keen to work with you on
identifying all the practical measures that we can put in place
to support the NHS and care workforce.
If I can make the point more explicitly, when people ask what my
priorities are for the NHS, then supporting the workforce is
first amongst those priorities.
Workforce
We know that this will be one of the toughest winters in the
74-year history of the NHS.
And I fully understand why a survey ahead of this conference by
NHS Providers showed that 85% of Trust leaders are more worried
about this winter than any in their NHS career.
We face the twin threats of Covid and flu, huge external
pressures around energy and cost of living.
We enter the colder months without the breathing space that we
might usually have had over the summer and that I’m sure
colleagues were used to in the earlier stages in their
career.
And due to the Covid pressures which have remained high, that has
continued that pressure.
So there is a huge amount to do, together, to steer health and
care through this storm and crucially, make the changes that will
make us better prepared for the future.
I am extremely grateful for everything that you have done so far
in these difficult conditions - working hard to get more nurses
on the front-line, and to meet those challenges.
And we in Government, through our manifesto commitment to recruit
50,000 more nurses, are recognising the extent of those pressures
and working with you.
We’ll do everything we can to protect the NHS this winter,
through the booster programme, more staff on the NHS 111 and
999.
And within the Department of Health and Social Care itself our
focus is very much on what practical measures we can take to
support you.
As an example, when I was minister for the Cabinet Office, I was
surprised to discover that we had over 60 strategies across
Whitehall - just for science and technology.
And there may be some here who feel they are often asked to
contribute to long term plans at the expense of time spent on
more immediate pressures.
My focus will be on the areas that matter most to patients and
workforce, and working with you on those practical measures of
support.
Elective recovery/delayed discharge
And so alongside workforce, a second priority will be on our
recovery plan.
With the backlog at 7.1 million, we will relentlessly focus on
the elective recovery work that is being led by Jim Mackey and
delivered by you as Chief Executives and Chairs.
Amanda and I want to see the Department and NHS England working
closely together on these shared priorities.
As part of this close working, Amanda and I are pleased to
announce two important appointments today, who will work closely
across both the Department and NSH England.
I am pleased that Professor Sir Tim Briggs - who a number of you
in this room will know very well, and who is one of this nation’s
most highly regarded orthopaedic surgeons - will bring his
considerable clinical expertise to a new role as Clinical Lead
for the Elective Recovery across that Programme.
Taking on a broader role as well as his leadership of Get It
Right First Time and his clinical practice.
I can also announce that Sarah-Jane Marsh will be taking up the
role of Deputy Chief Operating Officer and National Director for
Urgent and Emergency Care.
She will work closely with regional teams and Integrated Care
Systems to deliver our transformation of Urgent and Emergency
Care and make sure patients get the right care, in the right
place, at the right time.
Sarah-Jane will replace Pauline Philip, who I’d like to thank for
her dedicated service in the role since 2015/
Initiatives like Get It Right First Time and Sarah Jane’s work
over the summer on the 100 Day Discharge taskforce sprint have
been making good progress in better using data to prioritise and
address variations in performance between areas.
We took together an extremely positive step over the summer, with
the two-year waits being virtually eliminated, and - as we focus
on the next steps of hitting the 78-week target by April 2023 -
we will work with you as Trust leaders to more quickly scale best
practice.
Adult Social Care Discharge Fund
This summer, I saw how problems often manifest themselves in one
part of a complex system but are caused elsewhere.
For instance, I know that the issues that we are seeing around
delayed discharge are a symptom of a broader pressure across
health and care.
To support this work, we have launched a £500 million Adult
Social Care Discharge Fund to help get people who do not need to
be on wards, and where this damages their health, out of hospital
and into social care.
Today I am pleased to announce details of the fund, which will be
provided to ICBs and local authorities to free up beds, at a time
when bed occupancy is at 94%, and to improve capacity for social
care.
The first tranche will be provided by early December, and the
second will be distributed at the end of January.
In line with our devolved and data-driven approach, we will allow
local areas to determine how we can speed up the discharge of
patients out of hospital.
This might be through purchasing supportive technology, through
boosting domiciliary care capacity, or funding physiotherapists
or occupational therapists to support recovery at home.
Meanwhile, we will also be looking closely at the impact of how
funding is used and using this data to inform future decisions on
funding, including a more compelling evaluation capacity to help
those discussion with the centre of Government.
Government/ICB relationship
Tackling delayed discharge must be an effort that spans a number
of different areas across health and care, with social care,
primary care, community services all working together with
hospitals.
I want to move away from blame being attached to particular parts
of the system for problems that arise but are the consequences of
issues that have arisen elsewhere in that complex system.
Delayed discharge needs to be much more of a team effort, where
everyone plays their part, and where decisions on where risk sits
within a local system are best made by those closer to the
issue.
Equally, I am sure you can appreciate that quite often as a
Secretary of State, being held accountable for individual
operational failure, it can feel far removed from the day-to-day
decision made at a local level.
It is far better that variation in the different needs of
demographics and local healthcare systems is reflected in
devolving decisions to local leaders, who of course are better
placed to assess the trade-offs about where risk sits within
those decisions, rather than it being determined in a one-size
fits all way within a ministerial office.
So a key direction of travel will to be empower the ICBs much
more to harness advances around population level data, with the
role of the centre being geared around supporting areas to
address those variations in performance - of which, of course,
you all play one of the largest parts.
We will support Trusts in stopping lower priority spend so they
can prioritise areas that matter most to patients - like cancer
care.
And we will also show more transparency from the centre about how
our own resource is being deployed, to ensure this spend better
aligns with fewer targets and more ICB autonomy.
We’re again showing, not telling, in that regard, and so
providing transparency of department spend for DHSC and our
central ALBs - which it’s worth remembering accounts for 2.8
billion pounds of spend - and the Department, along with the vast
majority of our Arm’s Length Bodies, have now published
searchable organograms showing all job titles and the number of
people working in each team.
So you as health leaders can see more clearly where resource is
spent at the centre, and we can start a conversation about
whether priorities and resource is best aligned with supporting
you in meeting the challenges your local health system faces.
Pay
I’d like to touch briefly on pay, which I know is an important
issue for your teams.
As in all sectors, pay is a central issue, particularly given the
wider cost of living pressures.
I am keen to work constructively with trade union colleagues.
Last week, I met representatives from the Royal College of
Nursing and yesterday I held a roundtable with a wide range of
trade unions - discussing the issues that they have raised on
patient safety, non-pay benefits, and of course pay itself.
But I do not think it is realistic that increases should be three
times the amount paid to those outside the public sector.
And the £9 billion cost this would entail would impact other
important areas of spend, such as buildings and technology, which
are also important to staff.
However, I am grateful for the discussions that we had over the
past few weeks and look forward to future discussions, and have
made clear my door is open and we want to engage constructively.
And I can assure you all that this is an issue that I am
determined to take forward.
GP access
Turning to GP access, which is another of key priority.
Because when it comes to people’s direct experience of the NHS,
over 90% of that experience is through primary care.
So addressing the 8 a.m. morning scramble, opening access to
appointments is a key area of focus, and indeed was a key
component of the Plan for Patients.
We know that there is no single solution and we will be looking
to ensure that we have a wider workforce for primary care.
We’ll be looking at the skills mix in primary care, creating more
appointments for patients, rolling out the extra phone lines,
looking at how we can progress Pharmacy First.
Exploring ways to do things differently, such as new areas like
home testing, and redesigning patient pathways so that all the
burden doesn’t fall on GPs.
Ensuring a stronger future for health and care/RAAC
Another of my priorities is ensuring a stronger
future for health and care in terms of how we use the latest
technologies and trends to improve outcomes for patients and make
sure that taxpayers’ money is well spent.
One example of that is on the NHS estate.
I know that there are huge concerns about issues of the RAAC
concrete used in certain hospitals, which needs urgent
attention.
And I want to speak directly to the chief executives of all the
Hospital trusts that are affected.
I understand the seriousness of this issue and I am committed to
delivering the Government’s commitment to eradicating RAAC from
the NHS estate.
Equally, there has been great interest in the wider new hospitals
build programme, and Saffron, I know that you have talked a lot
about the importance of our capital programme to the longer-term
future of the NHS.
And I couldn’t agree more.
I want to use the opportunity of this biggest hospital building
programme in a generation, to think differently about how we
approach the NHS estate.
It’s important to bear in mind that if you look at the last ten
hospitals, nine of the last ten hospitals built in England were
over time and over budget.
It interests me that given where we were four years ago, as
Minister of State in the department I visited the Royal Liverpool
Hospital - which I was told four years ago was near completion,
when on my visit to that hospital, and four years later I am now
visiting again today with it only opening last month.
So there is an urgent need to change how all NHS buildings are
constructed in the future.
This means moving away from bespoke designs by local Trusts and
instead having national standardised designs built through modern
methods of construction where the construction time on site is
much quicker, the operational performance is delivered quicker,
and the environmental features are better integrated into the
build.
And the central evaluation process within Government - which to
date has been a sticking point for many Trusts - can be
streamlined because of the greater consistency of design.
Data and technology
Whilst Covid has left us with many challenges, it has also shown
us that there are new ways of working which could apply.
One of the most important of those opportunities is around better
use of the NHS app, which should be much more central to how
people access health services.
I very much welcome that so many GPs are now making their patient
records and testing results available on the NHS app, and I think
there are significant opportunities to harness the NHS app
further - particularly in the context of pressures in primary
care, but more widely on preventative medicine.
And we have some big updates to come, including from the end of
this month, allowing people to book their Covid jab through the
NHS app.
But I also want to look at how we can make greater use of patient
data, in a safe and secure way, to power life-changing medical
research and cement our nation’s status as a science
superpower.
I want patients to have more opportunities to share data, on an
opt-in basis, to support our great universities, start-ups and
scale-ups who are making incredible breakthroughs.
And through cloud computing, machine learning and the Internet of
Things, allow for data to be used and interrogated in new
ways.
This can give us a competitive advantage when it comes to
attracting tech pioneers and researchers in the future of health
but also help us deliver more, effective, personalised care for
patients.
This has to sit of course alongside basic improvements like the
Electronic Patient Records being rolled out more quickly, and the
poor WiFi coverage that remains too often a frustration for
staff.
Challenges ahead/Conclusion
No-one here is in any doubt as to the size of the challenge that
we collectively face.
We have to deal with pressures from flu and Covid this winter,
substantial backlogs from the pandemic, the wider cost of living
challenges faced by our workforce.
And so as a result, my key areas of focus in the months ahead
will be first and foremostly supporting our workforce, focusing
forensically on our recovery plans - across electives, urgent and
emergency care - including the issue of tackling delayed
discharge and primary care access.
Alongside this, we need to fix the issue in term of the RAACs,
and we need to maintain momentum on the new hospital building
programme, in particular streamlining the central approval
process.
And invest in tech, so we can make it easier to deliver good
patient outcomes and better harness our approach on preventative
medicine in a way that incentivises patients to provide data for
our scientific community - who in turn, enable those treatments
to be personalised, and pathways to be streamlined.
I will play my part in to try and reduce the number of top-down
requests that you face, devolve decision making to a greater
degree, and allow those closest to the patient to better balance
how risk is addressed - given the complex landscape in which you
all work.
And I will set a much higher bar within Government to any new
legislation, which so often creates undue distraction.
Thank you once again for everything that you do.
I’m very much looking forward in this role to working with you
all to build a more resilient, healthier NHS for the long-term,
so that collectively we can give the security to the people we
represent of knowing it will be there for them when they need
it.
Thank you very much."