News Release

NHS facing a 'deepening financial crisis' says Head of Health Policy at the BMA

Beyond the Nicholson challenge: How the comprehensive spending review protection for the NHS hides a deepening financial crisis

Peer-Reviewed Publication

BMJ

Chancellor George Osborne has announced an increase in health spending of 1.9% for 2015/16, but taking inflation into account the true figure will be just 0.1%. And although politicians are promising to protect and increase the health budget every year, the latest Comprehensive Spending Review shows that the reality to be quite different.

According to Ford, the NHS will have had to find £20 billion in efficiency savings by then and build even more savings on top. With demand for services rising by 4% per year, the NHS will have to generate further savings of £4.25bn to meet the pressures arising from an increasingly older population and technological change, resulting in a total of £24.25bn savings by 2016 – or a quarter of its total budget.

Ford says most of the £5.8bn efficiencies made in 2011/12 came from pay freezes and one-off cuts and it is "totally unrealistic" to think that a quarter of the budget can be saved in this way. He believes the scale of savings would require "pay and staffing levels to be decimated" making the service "unviable".

He draws on a recent BMA survey which showed that around two third of doctors want to make changes but due to lack of time, capacity or support are unable to do so and "feel frustrated and disempowered".

He says the "NHS is facing a deepening crisis [and] the recent comprehensive spending review must serve as a wake-up call".

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