The Joseph Rowntree Foundation (JRF) is warning that the nation’s
health can’t be protected only through NHS reform, as new
JRF-backed research by the King’s Fund health and care think tank
exposed the staggering toll poverty is taking on NHS services.
With almost four million people in the UK facing destitution in a
single year, and around two million families forced to switch off
fridges or freezers, the effects of poverty are tangible and felt
in all parts of the NHS. The research found a direct correlation
between deprivation and emergency admissions to hospital,
indicating that poverty is worsening health as well as affecting
access to services.
JRF is calling on politicians to “get serious about tackling
hardship” as part of their pitch to the public ahead of the
general election, as the effects of deep poverty risk becoming a
“mounting catastrophe” in years to come.
‘Illustrating the relationship between poverty and NHS
services’, published today (18 March) by the King’s Fund
found:
- Health inequalities affect all NHS services but the most
acute care, which is the most expensive, is “running hot” with
health problems made worse by poverty and not being addressed
before they become serious. Hospital data shows a direct
correlation between higher levels of deprivation and higher
emergency admissions.
- 30% of people living in the most deprived
areas have turned to 999, 111, A&E
or a walk-in centre because they were unable to access a GP
appointment, compared to just 10% of people in the least deprived
areas.
- The increase in length of stay in critical care beds has been
greater among more deprived groups. Between 2017/18 and 2022/23
the average length of stay in critical care increased 27%
for people in the most deprived communities but just 13%
for the least deprived.
The research provides proof of what clinicians and poverty
experts have observed – that people living in poverty experience
greater illness, find it harder to access treatment and die
earlier than the rest of the population. For some health
conditions, mortality rates are higher even if prevalence is
lower – for examples with atrial fibrillation, people in deprived
communities are 1.3 times less likely to suffer the condition yet
deaths from it are 1.6 times higher.
Paul Kissack, Chief Executive of the Joseph Rowntree Foundation
said:
“As we approach a general election, any political leader serious
about turning the tide on worsening health in our country, and
protecting the NHS, needs to get serious about tackling poverty
and hardship. Deep poverty is driving pressure into an already
overstretched health service. With acute health care running hot,
no serious plan for our NHS can be made that doesn’t address
poverty.
“And improving the nation’s health goes well beyond the NHS. We
live in a country where millions of people – including a million
children – face destitution, going without essentials such as
food, toothpaste or warm clothes. This scale of hardship risks a
mounting catastrophe for the nation’s health.
“For the sake of people’s dignity, their health and to protect
their NHS, it is time for political leaders to get serious about
tackling hardship – addressing poverty as the essential
foundation for improving the nation’s health and wellbeing.”
Notes to Editors
- JRF and the Trussell Trust are calling for an Essentials Guarantee which
would embed in our social security system the widely supported
principle that, at a minimum, Universal Credit should protect
people from going without essentials. Developed in line with
public attitude insights and focus groups, this policy would
ensure everyone has a protected minimum amount of support in
Universal Credit to afford essentials. It would enshrine in
legislation:
- a legal minimum in Universal Credit: the standard allowance
would need to at least meet this amount, and deductions (such as
debt repayments to government, or as a result of the benefit cap)
would not be allowed to reduce support below this level;
- an independent process to regularly recommend the Essentials
Guarantee level, based on the cost of essentials (such as food,
utilities and vital household items) for the adults in a
household (excluding rent and council tax).
- At the Joseph Rowntree Foundation, we work to speed up and
support the transition to a future free from poverty, in which
people and planet can flourish.