The document discusses challenges facing the NHS in England and reforms proposed to address them. It outlines population aging and rising chronic disease prevalence as challenges. The Five Year Forward View proposes integrated primary and community care networks and greater emphasis on prevention. However, public health budgets are being cut even as needs rise. The success of reforms will depend on evaluation of outcomes, efficiency, experiences and the impact of funding changes.
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1. Primary Care and Public Health in
England: What does the future look like?
Professor Azeem Majeed, Department of Primary Care and
Public Health, Imperial College London, UK
2. What challenges does the NHS face?
• England’s National Health Service (NHS) faces major
challenges
• The NHS has improved substantially in the last 15 years and
needs to continue to improve
• Population of England is ageing
• Greater support is needed for frail, older patients
• Prevalence of many chronic diseases – such as diabetes – is
increasing
• Greater focus in prevention and healthy living needed
• Quality of care can vary between different family practices, NHS
Trusts and geographical areas
• Considerable financial pressures on government spending
9. NHS Five Year Forward View
• Published in 2015
• What forms of integration are being proposed?
• Family practitioner led integration
• Hospital led integration
10. Family practitioner led integration
• Traditionally, family practitioners (general practitioners) in the
UK have worked in group practices with other doctors, nurses
and administrative staff
• Family practitioners come together to form federations of larger
groups: ‘primary care at scale’
• These federations can then apply to become Multispecialty
Community Providers
• Multispecialty Community Providers can employ other
professionals such as nurses, specialists, and allied health
professionals
• They could also potentially have their own hospital beds
• Take over much of the work currently done by hospitals, e.g.
outpatient clinics
11. Hospital led integration
• Hospitals will also be allowed to develop integrated services
• This will include the option to employ family practitioners and
form Accountable Care Organisation structures
• Larger hospitals will also be able to form partnerships with other
hospitals including smaller hospitals and specialist hospitals
12. Integration of urgent and out of hours care
• Currently, there are many different providers of emergency care
• Family practitioners, emergency departments, urgent care
centres, ambulance and paramedic services, rapid response
teams
• Can be confusing and difficult to navigate for patients
• Integration of these services is now planned through the
development of urgent and emergency care networks
13. Other linked initiatives
• Much greater emphasis on prevention and promoting healthy
lifestyles to address problems such as obesity
• Greater emphasis on person-centred care
• More care delivered in people’s homes
• Community engagement
• Promoting health in the workplace
• Use of new technology, such as remote monitoring and tele-
consultations
• Give patients access to their electronic family practitioner
records
14. Expansion of GP training numbers
• Increasing recognition that the NHS needs more generalists
(family practitioners) to deliver these changes
• Support for greater investment in primary care
• Give clinical commissioning groups greater control over the
development of local primary care services
• Expand the number of general practitioners in training with a
target of 50% of UK medical graduates to work in primary care
• New roles for general practitioners: GPSIs, urgent care, elderly
care, child health – in additional to traditional roles
• Will the NHS be able to train, recruit & retain more GPs?
• Other models of primary care need to be considered
• Look at skill-mix in primary care & gatekeeping role of GPs
15. GP Five Year Forward View
• Published in April 2016
• Recognition at a senior level that primary care is struggling
• Increase NHS spending on primary care by £2.4 billion per year by
2020-21, around 10.7% of the NHS budget
• Recruit 5,000 GPs, 3,000 mental health workers and 1,500 clinical
pharmacists
• Measures to support struggling practices, boost premises investment,
cut bureaucracy and GP workload
• Funding for ‘7-day’ working (but not compulsory for practices)
• Promote online and video consultations
• £6m for training practice managers and £45m for reception and clerical
staff. £15m for practice nurse development.
16. Some potential limitations of GP Five Year Forward
• The new funding money is not being put into core funding for practices.
It is largely attached to schemes and initiatives NHS England is keen to
push and develop. Some of these will potentially benefit all practices,
others will only help those practices embracing the government’s plan
to deliver general practice ‘at scale’.
• Not ‘new’ money from the Treasury, it is money from the overall £8.4
billion uplift in funding for the NHS announced in the Autumn. Other
areas of the health service will be receive proportionally less and is
predicated on large (£22 billion) efficiency savings.
• Other Department of Health budgets (e.g. HEE) are being cut
• Bringing general practice funding up to 10% of the NHS budget is
taking it back up to the proportion it received a decade ago.
18. An example from Lambeth Council
• We are keen to hear your views on how we can run great services on
less money. All residents, stakeholders and service providers in
Lambeth are welcome to give views. Your feedback and suggestions
will help us reshape services in the borough in view of our reduced
resources
• Since 2013, Lambeth council has been responsible for Public Health
(when it was transferred to us from the NHS). As with other councils,
Lambeth receives a specific Public Health grant from the government
which is used to fund a range of services to improve the health and
well-being of local residents. These include:
• Sexual health (testing, treatment and contraception)
• Drug and alcohol treatment programmes
• Services to promote health improvement (eg: health visitors, NHS Health
Checks, stop smoking services, diet and weight management services, and
physical activity services).
19. An example from Lambeth Council
• We have been working closely with partners in the NHS, with patients,
with service providers, with Public Health specialists and a range of
other stakeholders to improve and transform these services.
• This work will continue this year but, unfortunately, the government has
now announced that it is reducing funding for these services and this
requires us to pause our improvement work to address the immediate
funding shortfall.
• The government cut means we have a shortfall of around £3million
this year and we will have further cuts to our Public Health grant each
year between now and 2020.
• In the last financial year, the council covered the £1.9m cut to its Public
Health grant from its reserves, but the government is giving less money
to the council to run services. We cannot keep using council reserves.
As a result, we have to look for ways to spend less on Public Health
while maintaining a good level of service and continuing to try to
improve our residents’ health.
20. How will new developments be evaluated
• Important to evaluate new developments in the NHS
• Quality of care and health outcomes
• Health care efficiency
• Patient experience including patient reported outcomes and
quality of life
• Experience of health care providers
• Impact of public health cuts on the NHS and health outcomes?
21. Conclusions
• Some new NHS investment – but investment is very low by
historical standards
• Will the new models of healthcare delivery deliver the £22 billion
efficiency savings the Treasury expects?
• What impact will contractual changes have? Junior doctors,
consultants, GPs, public health consultants
• Can primary care attract and retain enough doctors?
• What impact will cuts in public health budgets have on careers
in the specialty?