Tag: Department of Health and Social Care

  • PRESS RELEASE : Free prescription age frozen at 60 [June 2023]

    PRESS RELEASE : Free prescription age frozen at 60 [June 2023]

    The press release issued by the Department of Health and Social Care on 15 June 2023.

    Everyone aged 60 and over will continue to receive free prescriptions, the government has confirmed today.

    • Prescriptions will continue to be free for anyone aged 60 or older
    • Decision follows consultation on the upper age limit at which prescriptions are paid for
    • Free prescriptions remain available for those most in need

    Everyone aged 60 and over will continue to receive free prescriptions, the government has confirmed today.

    The announcement comes in response to a consultation launched by the Department of Health and Social Care in 2021 looking at whether the age free prescriptions become available should be aligned with the State Pension age, which is currently 66.

    Taking into account a number of factors, including current cost of living and increased medical needs due to an ageing population, the government has decided to freeze the age at 60.

    Minister for Health Neil O’Brien said:

    This government recognises the pressures with the cost of living caused by Russia’s invasion of Ukraine. That’s why we are providing cost of living help worth £3,300 on average per household over last year and this, among the most generous help anywhere in Europe.

    It’s also why we have decided to maintain the prescription exemption age where it is. Nine out of 10 prescriptions are already free at the point of use and on top of that we also provide financial help to others on low incomes who don’t automatically get prescriptions for free.

    Prescription charge exemptions will also remain in place for those aged under 16 or aged 17 and 18 but in full time education, while those in receipt of certain benefits can also receive free prescriptions.

    People on a low income who do not qualify for an automatic exemption can also seek help under the NHS Low Income Scheme.

    For those who do not qualify for an exemption or the NHS Low Income Scheme, prepayment certificates (PPC) are available to help with frequent prescriptions should they be required.

    The annual PPC can be paid for through 10 instalments. This means people can have as many prescription items as needed for just over £2 per week.

  • PRESS RELEASE : Government takes action to strengthen local care systems [June 2023]

    PRESS RELEASE : Government takes action to strengthen local care systems [June 2023]

    The press release issued by the Department of Health and Social Care on 14 June 2023.

    The government has committed to a number of measures to support integrated care systems in response to 2 key reports.

    • Government publishes response to reviews on integrated care systems (ICSs)
    • National targets to be reviewed and streamlined to enable local health and care systems to focus on improving the health of local people
    • More effective care systems could help to cut waiting lists

    The government has committed to a number of measures to support ICSs in response to 2 key reports.

    Responding to the Hewitt Review which reported its findings on 4 April and the recent Health and Social Care Committee (HSCC) inquiry into the workings of the local health and care systems, the government reaffirmed its support for ICSs.

    In its response, the Department of Health and Social Care outlines the steps it will take working with NHS England and local health and care systems, to support learning and improvement and join up care for patients and communities. As part of this the department will review and streamline national targets to ensure that systems are able to focus on improving health for their populations.

    In line with the recommendations of the reviews, the government has also committed to:

    • continue supporting local systems to adapt to NHS England’s new operating framework, which lays out the new roles NHS England, ICSs and NHS providers will play in the wider health and care system
    • work with NHS England, local authorities and local health and care services to develop better information around funding for prevention services to inform future investment decisions
    • provide greater certainty over budgets for local health and care systems, by working to ensure reporting for small in-year funding pots is proportionate, freeing up time for planning and delivery of health and care to local people

    The actions from the government’s response will support health and care systems to be more effective, making them a vital tool for improving the speed at which people will receive care in their local areas and in some cases reducing their need to be placed on an NHS waiting list where community support is available.

    Government will be looking to take these commitments forward over the coming months, working with national partners and systems.

    Minister for Care Helen Whately said:

    Integrated care systems are already making a difference by bringing together local NHS organisations along with social care and the voluntary sector. We know that joined up care benefits patients and that’s exactly what ICSs are there to provide.

    We have listened to the reports and the actions we’re going to take, like reviewing how we reduce admin burdens on local systems, will build on the excellent work that ICSs are already doing.

    Amanda Pritchard, NHS Chief Executive, said:

    Integrated care systems have the power to change the way the NHS provides care for people while working alongside local government to ensure people live healthier lives.

    Health systems across the country are already making a real impact and we will continue to support local areas to improve outcomes for patients.

    ICSs bring together NHS, local government, social care providers, charities and other partners to deliver on 4 goals:

    • improving outcomes in population health and healthcare
    • tackling inequalities in outcomes, experience and access
    • enhancing productivity and value for money
    • helping the NHS support broader social and economic development

    Each ICS has an integrated care board that includes representatives from local authorities, primary care and NHS trusts and foundation trusts, who make decisions on commissioning health and care services in their local areas.

    The Health and Social Care Committee launched its inquiry into ICSs in July 2022. Subsequently, the Health and Social Care Secretary commissioned Rt Hon Patricia Hewitt to lead a separate, independent review in November 2022, to examine how the oversight and governance of these systems can best enable them to succeed.

    Both reviews covered ICSs in England including considering the NHS targets and priorities for which ICBs are accountable, including those set out in the government’s mandate to NHS England.

    Drawing on the insights of leaders from across the NHS, local government, social care providers, the charitable and the voluntary and social enterprise sectors, the Hewitt review looked at how best to empower local leaders to focus on improving outcomes for their populations.

    Background information

    Government response to the HSCC report and the Hewitt Review on integrated care systems

    Each ICS has an integrated care board (ICB), a statutory organisation responsible for developing a plan for meeting the health needs of the population, managing the NHS budget and arranging for the provision of health services in the ICS area. ICBs include representatives from local authorities, primary care and NHS trusts and foundation trusts.

    Each ICS also has an integrated care partnership (ICP) that brings together a broad alliance of partners concerned with improving the care, health and wellbeing of the population. The ICP is responsible for producing an integrated care strategy on how to meet the health and wellbeing needs of the population in the ICS area.

  • PRESS RELEASE : Government and unions collaborate to implement NHS pay deal [June 2023]

    PRESS RELEASE : Government and unions collaborate to implement NHS pay deal [June 2023]

    The press release issued by the Department of Health and Social Care on 13 June 2023.

    Over one million NHS staff are already receiving pay rises, backdated to April, and one-off payments agreed between the government and the NHS staff council.

    • The government and the NHS staff council launch a joint programme to implement non-pay measures in the deal to better support the NHS workforce, including improving opportunities for nursing career progression, reviewing safe staffing guidance and reducing agency spend
    • Stakeholders asked to share their views on the NHS Pay Review Body process – including timing of the pay round, and appointments process for members

    NHS staff are now benefitting from the Agenda for Change pay deal agreed between government and unions, ultimately helping to cut waiting lists and improve patient care.

    Writing in an open letter to NHS staff today, the Health and Social Care Secretary Steve Barclay will thank them for their hard work and update them on the measures being taken to improve their working lives.

    The letter also outlines how the government will work with the NHS staff council to oversee the implementation of the non-pay elements of the recent NHS pay agreement. NHS staff council and the Department for Health and Social Care (DHSC) will jointly chair a programme board, working collaboratively with leads from NHS England and NHS Employers to begin implementing the commitments. This includes ways to boost the welfare and retention of the NHS workforce and to improve opportunities for nursing career progression, reviewing safe staffing guidance and reducing agency spend.

    As well as this, stakeholders who participate in the NHS Pay Review Body process – including health unions, NHS Employers, NHS Providers, NHS England and the devolved administrations – are being invited to share their views on how the NHS Pay Review Body can work as effectively as possible. This includes timing of the pay round, appointments process for members, input of the NHS staff council and the data and evidence that is fed in.

    It follows over one million NHS staff receiving their pay rise, backdated to April, in their pay checks this month alongside one-off bonuses.

    Health and Social Care Secretary Steve Barclay said:

    I hugely value the work of NHS staff and the vital role they’re playing to cut waiting lists, which is one of the government’s 5 priorities.

    That’s exactly why we are pushing ahead with the deal we agreed with unions, which is about much more than just pay – it’s also about protecting people’s wellbeing and supporting their development.

    We are working hand in hand with the NHS staff council to ensure we’re delivering the changes that staff want to see and will benefit them, and patients, the most.

    The pay rise will see an Agenda for Change employee at the Band 6 entry point – such as an experienced physiotherapist, paramedic or a midwife – receive over £5,100 in extra pay across last year and this year, with over £2,000 in bonus payments arriving as a lump sum in pay cheques this month while a newly qualified nurse in Band 5 will receive £1,890 in one-off payments and see their basic pay increase to over £28,400.

    It also means staff working on the lower bands in Bands 1 and 2 will be earning £11.45 per hour in 2023 to 2024, significantly above (9.9%), the National Living Wage.

    To build a stronger, healthier NHS for the long-term with patients at its centre, it is vital to have the workforce to support it. There are already record numbers of staff working in the NHS to care for patients and cut waiting lists, with over 53,600 more people compared to a year ago – including over 5,400 more doctors and 12,900 more nurses. The government and NHS will build on this progress and will soon publish a workforce plan focused on recruiting and retaining more staff to make the NHS the best place to work.

    Background

    Stakeholders will be contacted shortly by the department to set out the next steps on how to submit their views on the Pay Review Body process.

    See a copy of the letter from the Health Secretary to Agenda for Change staff.

    A programme board, chaired by DHSC and staff council chairs, will provide oversight of the programme and ensure outcomes are in line with the original intention behind the deal.

    The programme board would be responsible for commissioning workstreams, supporting policy development and ensuring work is delivered as intended with the Agenda for Change deal. Individual work strands will be owned and driven by either DHSC, NHS England or the NHS staff council.

    Through the jointly owned programme board, DHSC and the NHS staff council will oversee all non-pay elements of the deal which include:

    • looking for ways to improve nursing career progression
    • a review of safe staffing guidance in order to develop a national evidence-based policy framework
    • improving support for newly qualified healthcare registrants
    • exploring the factors driving increasing rates of agency spend in the NHS
    • looking for ways for the pay setting process and the NHS Pay Review Body to operate effectively
    • agree amendments to terms and conditions to ensure that existing NHS staff will not suffer a detriment to their basic pay when they undertake apprenticeships as part of agreed career development
    • considering how the job evaluation system can be consistently applied
    • working with the Social Partnership Forum to identify ways to tackle and reduce violence against NHS staff
    • consider the application of a cap to redundancy payments of £100,000 and over

    For more information on the Agenda for Change pay deal see DHSC’s media fact sheet.

  • PRESS RELEASE : Supporting innovation and adoption of technology across the NHS [June 2023]

    PRESS RELEASE : Supporting innovation and adoption of technology across the NHS [June 2023]

    The press release issued by the Department of Health and Social Care on 13 June 2023.

    Lord Markham’s keynote speech at London Tech Week 2023.

    I’m delighted to be here with you all today at our annual Health Tech Summit in collaboration with London Tech Week.

    As you will have heard from the Prime Minister earlier today, this government has a clear mission – to make the UK the most innovative economy in the world. The UK tech industry is one of the engines for economic growth and a clear representation of our plan to cement the UK’s status as a Science and Technology ‘Superpower’ by 2030.

    Last year, the UK became just the third country in the world to have a tech sector valued at $1 trillion. It is the biggest in Europe by some distance and behind only the US and China globally.

    I want to illustrate my passion about the role of innovation and technology in improving the health of our nation, and how I’ve seen the power they hold first-hand. During my role as ITV Strategy Director, I discovered the power of innovation during the transition from analogue to digital TV while pioneering the move to Freeview.

    I later moved into healthcare where the company I set up significantly reduced the waiting time for PCR results from 72 hours down to just 3 or 4 hours. It was at this point I also experienced first-hand the challenges of doing business with the NHS, so I sympathise wholeheartedly with anyone who’s struggled in that regard and am committed to removing barriers and ensuring our health service remains on the frontline of innovation.

    Today I’d like to talk to you about how government is supporting innovation and the adoption of digital health technologies, offering significant opportunities to transform the way we deliver access to health and care, with some substantial investment and activity to boost the range of technologies available for adoption across the NHS.

    As we all know, the NHS is under increasing pressure.

    This is arising from increasing demand, an ageing population, and co-morbidities to name a few factors. At the same time, healthcare expenditure represented around 12% of GDP in 2021. This cost to our economy is only set to increase in future years and we have a real challenge to ensure that the NHS is sustainable.

    Digital and technology is one major way that we will address some of the challenges that face the NHS. We know that digitally mature trusts operate with approximately 10% improved efficiency compared with their less digitally mature peers.

    We are exploring new technologies which it would be useful for the NHS to adopt and we’re working collaboratively across a range of areas to support companies to develop and deploy digital health technologies and I’d like to share some examples with you.

    The Small Business Research Initiative Healthcare award programme supports innovators and entrepreneurs. As of 2022 to 2023, the programme has made cumulative investments of over £129 million and has funded a total of 324 projects.

    The Digital Health Partnership Award has funded 43 NHS projects identified as novel, with the potential to scale at pace. The technologies are focused on supporting people at home and over 140,000 patients have been supported in under 2 years.

    Innovate UK provides funding to UK-based businesses or research organisations to support and stimulate innovation in the UK economy, offering grants of between £25,000 and £10 million and innovation loans of between £100,000 and £1 million.

    The National Institute for Health and Care Research works with industry at all stages of the clinical development pipeline. Funding is available to support promising innovations to generate the evidence needed to get to market.

    We’ve provided £123 million to test and evaluate 86 AI technologies in areas such as urgent stroke care, home testing for disease and cancer screening. These technologies are being deployed and scaled across 99 hospitals, and 300 primary care networks in the UK.

    We’re working on coordinating these investment programmes and evidencing the impact for scale across the NHS – I will return to this point a little later.

    As well as the excellent technologies which currently exist, we continue to identify new opportunities to support innovation that can be scaled at a national level. I am excited to share further details of our plans for digital therapeutics.

    In March the Chancellor included £225 million of ringfenced funding within the Budget for digital mental health and musculoskeletal, known as MSK, initiatives.

    We’re accelerating the deployment and adoption of clinical grade technologies that are evidence-based, and used to prevent, manage, or treat a medical disorder or disease. The first mental health and MSK products will be available via the NHS App later this year, allowing 24/7 access to suit lifestyle factors without the need for a clinician referral.

    This is a significant change, moving from these technologies only being available in some areas of the country, and for those who have been referred into a clinical pathway. This demonstrates our commitment to scaling well evidenced technologies and breaking down commissioning barriers. And these 2 areas are only the start.

    And, we’ll pilot new, novel mental health technology that has potential to transform our model of care, enabling our citizens to have access years earlier to the most promising technologies.

    We’ll also be levelling up the use of digital tools within our existing NHS mental health talking therapies services so that people have support from day one while waiting for their appointment.

    We are supporting the NHS to be in a better position to adopt the right technologies.

    A key priority for technology funding is supporting health and care systems to ‘level up’ their digital maturity and ensure they have a core level of infrastructure, digitisation and skills by March 2025.

    The What Good Looks Like guidance builds on established good practice to provide clear direction for health and social care leaders to digitise, connect and transform services to improve outcomes for the people we serve.

    To support systems level up, we’re conducting a digital maturity assessment to help organisations baseline their current level of digital maturity against What Good Looks Like to improve decision-making, identify opportunities for collaboration, and enhance patient experience.

    The assessment is an essential tool for health and care systems to track their levelling up journey and will be repeated annually to track progress.

    Digital maturity is just one side of the picture however. The New Hospital Programme will ensure our world-class healthcare system and staff have the facilities they need for the future. It will help to bring things together in terms of tech and modern building design. Digital design is at the heart of our approach to standardisation in the New Hospital Programme. Our aim is for this to bring even greater productivity gains than digital alone and there could be 20% productivity gains from that, which will encourage the Treasury to help fund even more new hospitals.

    Data Saves Lives, published a year ago this week, set the strategy for making better use of data to improve services and transform lives. This document provided the ambitious direction, and good progress has been made on implementing it. Over half of the commitments we promised are now delivered, including ensuring that all 42 of our integrated care systems have a shared care record in place and the agreement of a target architecture for health and care. But we now need to move deeper into delivery, so more people can enjoy the benefits of a modern, data-driven health and care service. You’ll hear more about our progress later this month.

    As I’ve already mentioned, we’re working to evidence the impact of digital health technologies for scale across the NHS and to develop a clear policy framework and market pathway to support this.

    NHS England are working collaboratively with NICEMHRA and other partners to create a clear, efficient and user-centred pathway to scale digital health technologies in the NHS.

    The pathway is being co-designed with views from industry and will be reflective of the dynamic market.

    The proposed commercial pathway will determine how products will be recommended across the NHS, which will provide clarity for innovators about how they evidence their products and how they will be reimbursed. The process will support the emerging digital health technology market, while providing value for money for the NHS. It will help to consolidate the buying points, streamline market access for industry and will also provide opportunity to leverage the buying power of the NHS.

    A conditional recommendation pathway is being designed to support innovators to gather evidence while undergoing the evaluation process.

    This improved pathway will enable a faster, more flexible route to market for digital health technologies across the NHS.

    We’re working to increase visibility and compliance with technology standards through the Digital Technology Assessment Criteria (DTAC).

    DTAC is a critical assurance process for all digital health technologies used for medical, health and wellness, or system efficiency purposes.

    It ensures that technologies deployed within the NHS meet our baseline standards for clinical safety, data protection, cyber security, interoperability and accessibility and usability.

    We’ve introduced audits which provide critical information on the level of risk we’re holding in relation to digital health technologies and clinical systems and gives us the first national picture of what digital health technologies are deployed where across the NHS. We continue to ensure that standards are not a blocker for technology adoption.

    We’ve developed guidance on which framework agreements to use to simplify buying digital and IT goods and services.

    Our digital and technology procurement framework strategy recommendations make the procurement process easier for both buyers and vendors to navigate, removing duplication and reducing costs.

    We’ve introduced a number of nationally led dynamic purchasing systems enabling buyers and sellers to be agile in the purchasing and supply of digital solutions for the NHS.

    AI and digital can have transformative impact, but only if developed safely, ethically and in line with best practice in evidence based medicine. That’s why we funded the AI and Digital Regulations Service, which brings together all guidance on regulations that apply to digital and AI in one place, as well as advice on ensuring it is truly value-adding.

    I’m happy to announce the service has launched in full today – so if you’re a developer of AI, or a clinician or social care worker looking to use AI, you can use the service’s website for information and help to do it the right way.

    If you’re developing an AI device, you’ll find which regulations you need to meet and when.

    If you’re looking to adopt an AI device, you’ll find guidance to help you feel confident about using AI in your health or care service.

    Users have told us this ‘one stop shop’ has made it easier to understand regulations and saved them time in bringing products to market.

    This is a partnership led by NICEMHRACQC and HRA, but brings in even more relevant regulators such as the Information Commissioner’s Office; demonstrating one way our health service is leading in innovation-friendly regulation.

    This is the direction across the rest of government, as the AI regulations white paper looks to provide joined-up support like this to developers.

    Despite the undeniable progress we’ve already made, we must be restless and relentless in our drive to ensure that the UK maintains its rightful place at the cutting edge of innovation. And we must continue to make the UK the go to place for industry to develop healthcare innovations, with access to the best data in the world to do so.

    I am absolutely determined to ensure that my experience of the challenges of doing business with the NHS are addressed. We are working hard on multiple fronts to streamline the market pathway, listening to the concerns of industry and taking practical steps to ensure market access is a lot smoother.

    I‘m more confident than ever that together we can create one of the most exciting health innovation systems in the world.

    Thank you very much for listening.

  • PRESS RELEASE : Patients to benefit from new ambulance hubs and discharge lounges [June 2023]

    PRESS RELEASE : Patients to benefit from new ambulance hubs and discharge lounges [June 2023]

    The press release issued by the Department of Health and Social Care on 13 June 2023.

    The facilities will help cut urgent and emergency care waiting times for tens of thousands of patients across the country.

    • Six new ambulance hubs will increase efficiency – cutting out unnecessary delays and getting ambulances back on the road faster, ensuring they can reach people as quickly as possible
    • 42 discharge lounges are freeing up hospital beds, providing a more comfortable environment for patients who are about to return home
    • Backed by nearly £50 million in investment as part of plans to improve urgent and emergency care performance and cut waiting lists, one of the government’s top five priorities

    Six new ambulance hubs and 42 new and upgraded discharge lounges are opening at hospitals across the country, which will help cut urgent and emergency care waiting times for tens of thousands of patients.

    The new facilities are backed by the £50 million investment that was announced by the Health and Social Care Secretary Steve Barclay in January to help free up hospital beds and cut down on waiting times for patients ahead of next winter.

    In certain areas, ambulance queues to hand patients over to hospital care can be made worse due to a lack of physical space. The ambulance hubs will increase efficiency– cutting out unnecessary delays and getting ambulances back on the road faster, ensuring they can reach people as quickly as possible.

    Four of the new hubs – located at the Princess Royal Hospital in Telford Shropshire, the Leicester Royal Infirmary, the James Cook Hospital in Middlesbrough, and the Doncaster Royal – are already live and providing additional urgent and emergency care capacity. Two further hubs will come into use this summer at the Queen’s Hospital in Romford, east London, and the Glenfield Hospital in Leicester.

    Feedback from Trusts suggests that 1,000 patients have already benefitted from the ambulance hubs so far. The Doncaster Royal has met national targets for ambulance handovers every day since its hub opened, while the Leicester Royal Infirmary has reported an 86% reduction in hours lost to delays since November 2022.

    Health and Social Care Secretary Steve Barclay said:

    These new ambulance hubs and discharge lounges are another example of how we’re investing to cut waiting times – one of the government’s top five priorities. They are already benefitting tens of thousands of patients by freeing up beds and reducing the time for patients waiting to be admitted from A&E.

    The hubs will allow ambulances to manoeuvre more quickly and cut out unnecessary delays, and the lounges will free up hospital beds, while offering patients a more comfortable environment to recover in while they’re waiting to leave hospital. All of this is to ensure we can bring down waiting times and prepare for next winter.

    Health Minister Lord Markham said:

    Waiting times have already substantially reduced from the peak of winter pressures – but we know there is more to do, and we are investing record funding in health and care services to reduce waiting times and improve patient care.

    These new ambulance hubs will help free up ambulance crews to get back on the road more quickly and respond to emergencies, while expanded and upgraded discharge lounges will help free up hospital beds and cut A&E waiting times.

    NHSE National Director of Integrated Urgent and Emergency Care and NHSE Deputy Chief Operating Officer, Sarah-Jane Marsh, said:

    The hard work of health and social care teams across the country has meant we have seen improvements in ambulance response times and A&E performance since December, despite the impact of seasonal viruses, industrial action, and higher than usual bed occupancy.

    These dedicated spaces, alongside the range of actions we have outlined in our urgent and emergency care recovery plan, including thousands of new beds, hundreds of new ambulances and measures to help treat more people in the community, will help us further improve patient experience and help avoid unnecessary hospital admissions ahead of next winter.

    Patients who are due to be discharged that day but are waiting for medication or transportation will benefit from the discharge lounges – helping to free up beds and reduce waits for patients waiting to be admitted from A&E. These dedicated rooms will provide 439 additional beds, 364 chairs, and 44 extra trolleys in hospitals, freeing up capacity up across the country.

    The discharge lounges are improving patient experience by creating more space in hospitals, offering a comfortable environment with TVs, hot meals and discharge lounge nurses to attend to people’s needs while they are waiting – with 26 already open.

    Backed by more than £360,000 in funding, Northwick Park Hospital in north west London upgraded its lounge with six new beds and 10 chairs – improving flow through the hospital and impacting nearly 2,500 patients. The Hull Royal Infirmary received £300,000 in funding to convert its discharge lounge and provide an additional 52 beds, and nearly 1,500 patients have already used the facilities.

    Earlier this year, the government and NHS published an Urgent and Emergency Recovery Care Plan to achieve one of the fastest and longest sustained improvements in emergency waiting times in the NHS’ history. Frontline capacity will be boosted with 800 new ambulances, including 100 specialist mental health vehicles, and 5,000 more sustainable hospital beds backed by a £1 billion dedicated fund.

    The NHS successfully met the first target in its Elective Recovery Plan to virtually eliminate waits of over two years and has cut 18 month waits by over 91% from the peak in September 2021.

    There are already record numbers of people working in the NHS overall, and the NHS will shortly publish a long term workforce plan setting out plans to recruit and retain more staff. All of this is backed by up to £14.1 billion for health and social care over the next two years, on top of record funding.

  • PRESS RELEASE : 4 million checks, tests and scans carried out by CDCs [June 2023]

    PRESS RELEASE : 4 million checks, tests and scans carried out by CDCs [June 2023]

    The press release issued by the Department of Health and Social Care on 9 June 2023.

    The one-stop shops have delivered over 4 million additional checks for a range of conditions from cancer to heart or lung disease.

    • Across the country, community diagnostic centres (CDCs) have delivered over 4 million additional checks for a range of conditions from cancer to heart or lung disease – helping to cut waiting lists
    • Eight new CDCs to open, in addition to the 108 already delivering lifesaving checks
    • The one-stop shops support quicker access to care and offer patients a wide range of tests closer to home

    CDCs have delivered over 4 million checks, tests and scans for patients across the country since July 2021, cutting waiting lists and giving patients quicker access to care.

    The government is showing progress on its promise to open 160 of the facilities by March 2025, with a further 8 due to open before the end of the year, the Health and Social Care Secretary has today confirmed. These will provide capacity for more than 742,000 extra tests a year once fully operational, bolstering access to care.

    The government is investing £2.3 billion to transform diagnostic services, with 108 CDCs already up and running and a further 41 due to open. They have opened in a range of settings since the programme started in July 2021, including shopping centres and university campuses.

    GPs can refer patients to a centre so they can access life-saving checks closer to home and be diagnosed for a range of conditions, rather than travelling to hospital. The centres are not only more convenient for patients but are also more efficient for staff and free up clinicians’ time to help further cut the waiting lists.

    Health and Social Care Secretary Steve Barclay said:

    These new centres will benefit tens of thousands of patients, cutting out unnecessary hospital visits and delivering closer, more convenient care.

    Patients will be able to access a range of life-saving tests, including MRI scans, X-rays, and respiratory checks – speeding up the diagnosis of illnesses like cancer and heart disease.

    We have already made significant progress in bringing down waiting lists – one of the government’s top 5 priorities – and community diagnostic centres are a key part of this, with over 4 million vital checks delivered so far.

    These include:

    • Scarborough Gateway CDC: this will open in the town centre near Scarborough train station in December 2023 and offer 91,000 additional checks a year once fully operational
    • Scarborough CDC (Ripon) will open at Ripon Community Hospital in the same month, and will have capacity for 27,000 checks a year once up and running
    • Oldham CDC (South East Manchester) will open at the Crown Point Retail Park in Denton, Greater Manchester in December 2023, and offer 129,000 extra tests a year when all services are live
    • Manchester and Trafford  CDC (North Manchester) – this will open in Harpurhey in December 2023 and offer 41,000 tests when fully operational
    • Clacton CDC (Bluebird Lodge) – this will open at the Bluebird Lodge community hospital in Ipswich in December 2023 and carry out 24,000 extra tests once up and running
    • Plymouth CDC – this will open in the town in September 2023 and offer the capacity for 89,000 tests when services are live
    • North Lincolnshire CDC (Grimsby) – this facility will open in Grimsby in December 2023 and have the capacity to deliver 142,000 tests
    • Hull and East Riding CDC – this will open in the city in December 2023 and have the capacity to deliver 199,000 tests

    NHS national director of elective recovery, Sir James Mackey, said:

    These ‘one-stop shops’ play a key role in the NHS’s elective recovery plan, and the new CDCs are a welcome addition to more than 100 existing community diagnostic centres, which have already delivered more than 4 million tests and checks.

    Our elective recovery plan set out how the NHS will deliver 9 million more tests and checks per year by 2025, and the work of these diagnostic centres – some in convenient spots including shopping centres – are excellent examples of the innovative work being done across the health service to ensure patients get the tests and checks they need as quickly as possible.

    Other steps are being taken to bust the backlogs and boost patient choice. Last month, the government announced that patients will be empowered to choose where they receive hospital care. Currently just 1 in 10 patients exercise their right to choose but research shows that giving patients choice can cut up to 3 months off their waiting time by selecting a different hospital in the same region.

    The NHS successfully met the first target in its elective recovery plan to virtually eliminate waits of over 2 years and has cut 18 month waits by over 91% from the peak in September 2021.

    There are already record numbers of people working in the NHS overall, and the NHS will shortly publish a long term workforce plan setting out plans to recruit and retain more staff. All of this is backed by up to £14.1 billion for health and social care over the next 2 years, on top of record funding.

  • PRESS RELEASE : England on track to end new HIV transmissions by 2030 [June 2023]

    PRESS RELEASE : England on track to end new HIV transmissions by 2030 [June 2023]

    The press release issued by the Department of Health and Social Care on 7 June 2023.

    New HIV transmissions in England have fallen by almost a third since 2019, according to an update on the HIV Action Plan for England published today.

    • England is on track to meet the ambition set in January 2019 to reduce new HIV transmissions by 80% in 2025 and end new transmissions by 2030
    • Cases of diagnosed HIV have fallen by almost a third from 2019 to 2021, and by over a fifth for AIDS
    • £20 million funding committed by NHS England to expand HIV opt out testing in areas with the highest prevalence of the disease helped diagnose 2,000 new cases of blood-borne viruses in the first year of the programme

    New HIV transmissions in England have fallen by almost a third since 2019, while fewer people remain unaware of their HIV status as a result of increased testing across the country, according to an update on the HIV Action Plan for England published today.

    As part of the HIV Action Plan, NHS England is investing £20 million in the 3 years from 2022 to 2023 to 2024 to 2025 to expand blood borne viruses opt out testing in emergency departments in the local authority areas across the country with the highest prevalence of HIV: London, Brighton, Manchester, Salford and Blackpool. The report published today shows this expanded testing has helped diagnose 2,000 cases of blood-borne viruses – including 343 people living with HIV – in the first year of the programme.

    Another major commitment was the investment of over £3.5 million to deliver a national HIV prevention programme between 2021 to 2024 to raise awareness of HIV and sexually transmitted infections testing and prevention strategies. Reducing undiagnosed HIV infection through testing not only provides access to treatment that saves lives but means people who obtain undetectable levels of the virus cannot pass on HIV. During National HIV Testing Week 2023 almost 22,000 HIV testing kits were ordered – with self-testing kits (providing instant at-home results) available for the first time.

    Health Minister Neil O’Brien said:

    It’s hugely encouraging to see the progress made so far in our goal to end new HIV transmissions as well as AIDS and HIV-related deaths in England by 2030.

    Since the HIV Action Plan was launched in 2019, we have been working hard to reduce new infections by tackling stigma and urging more people to get tested, as well as helping people to access potentially life-saving treatment.

    Regardless of sexual orientation – people should get tested regularly for HIV, so we can drive down infections further.

    Professor Kevin Fenton, government’s Chief Advisor on HIV and Chair of HIV Action Plan Implementation Steering Group said:

    It’s positive to see new HIV diagnoses continue to fall, but our work is not done – late HIV diagnoses remain high in England which sadly increases the risk of death.

    Improving quality of life for people living with HIV and addressing stigma is a key objective in our HIV Action Plan and we will continue working with UKHSA and key delivery partners to understand, measure and address stigma in all its forms.

    We are very thankful to our many partners from government, NHS, local government and communities across the country who are working together to drive progress on the action plan. It is only through collective, focused action on ending HIV transmissions that we will be successful.

    Pre-exposure prophylaxis treatment (PrEP) is available to individuals with negative HIV status but that could be at higher risk of HIV infection – for example, those whose partner is HIV positive.

    To improve PrEP uptake, the PrEP Access and Equity Task and Finish Group – set up in September 2022 and chaired by the Association of Directors of Public Health and Terrence Higgins Trust – has gathered evidence to help break down barriers to eligible people accessing the treatment. Recommendations were presented to the HIV Action Plan Implementation Steering Group and will inform the development of a roadmap to improve PrEP access and equity.

    According to the HIV Action Plan monitoring and evaluation framework published by the UK Health Security Agency (UKHSA) in December 2022, the estimated number of people living with undiagnosed HIV in England fell by more than one thousand from 2019 to 2021, from 5,600 to 4,400.

    The number of people attending sexual health services due to their partner receiving a notification of positive HIV diagnosis also fell by almost half for the same time period, from 1,558 to 820.

    Prof Susan Hopkins, Chief Medical Advisor at the UK Health Security Agency, said:

    The end of HIV transmission is in sight in England, but increasing testing, access to prevention including PrEP and getting those diagnosed started on HIV treatment earlier is crucial to achieving this goal. Taking treatment if you are living with HIV so that the virus is undetectable prevents transmission.

    No matter your gender or sexual orientation, getting regularly tested, using condoms and PrEP (if you’re eligible), are essential to protect your and your partners health.

    To drive progress, a national HIV Action Plan Implementation Steering Group (HIVAP ISG) has been created and is chaired by Professor Kevin Fenton, who has also been appointed the government’s Chief Advisor on HIV. The national HIV Action Plan Implementation Steering Group includes all key partners, including the voluntary sector.

    DHSC has also created a Community Advisory Group, chaired by the National AIDS Trust and the LGBT Foundation, to advise the HIV Action Plan Implementation Steering Group through the lifetime of the HIV Action Plan.

    Many areas of the country have replicated this national action regionally, providing leadership and oversight of work underway within local systems. This has seen regional HIV action plans developed in areas such as the South West, working groups set up in the Midlands, stocktakes of testing activity and action via Sexual Health Networks in the South East and North East and Yorkshire, or regional HIV Action Planning Workshops as in the East of England.

  • PRESS RELEASE : Cross-government action announced to champion carers [June 2023]

    PRESS RELEASE : Cross-government action announced to champion carers [June 2023]

    The press release issued by the Department of Health and Social Care on 7 June 2023.

    Minister for Care, Helen Whately, held a reception at No 10 and announced a cross-government roundtable to meet the needs of carers in all aspects of their lives.

    • Minister for Care, Helen Whately, held a reception at No 10 to mark Carers Week and celebrate the contribution of carers
    • Unpaid carers, young carers and representatives from carers’ organisations attended the event
    • The minister announced a cross-government roundtable to champion carers’ needs across Whitehall

    Minister for Care, Helen Whately, held a reception at No 10 Downing Street for unpaid carers on Tuesday 6 June to mark Carers Week and champion the vital work they do.

    More than 30 unpaid carers, young carers and representatives of unpaid carers organisations attended the event, which also provided a forum for discussions on how to boost recognition and support for carers in the community, both by government and the public.

    Minister for Care, Helen Whately, said:

    Over 4 million people in England are unpaid carers. Carers Week is a time to focus on the huge efforts of carers, show appreciation and focus on what more we can do to support people caring for loved ones.

    Making sure carers are recognised in health, social care and education is a priority – along with helping people recognise themselves as carers so they can tap into local carers networks and support.

    I care about carers. I am going to hold a cross-government roundtable with other ministers to make sure that carers’ needs aren’t just recognised in social care, but in every aspect of their lives.

    The reception, held in partnership with Carers UK, provided an opportunity for a wide range of carers and carer organisations, as well as others who engage with unpaid carers through their work, to gather and discuss next steps on bettering support for carers.

    Addressing the reception, the minister called for communities across the UK to come together to recognise the huge contribution unpaid carers make to society.

    On behalf of the charities supporting Carers Week, Helen Walker, Chief Executive of Carers UK, said:

    Carers Week is an important annual opportunity to recognise the vital contribution made by the UK’s estimated 5.7 million unpaid carers looking after relatives or friends who are older, disabled or seriously ill.

    While often a rewarding role, caring for a loved one also comes with its challenges. This week we highlight just how important it is that unpaid carers are acknowledged and supported by all parts of the community.

    Yesterday’s Downing Street reception was an exciting occasion for unpaid carers to come together and be recognised for their contribution. We welcome the Minister for Care’s commitment to a cross-government roundtable which will be an important opportunity for ministers to consider the financial and practical support many unpaid carers really need.

    Led by Carers UK, this year’s Carers Week is supported by Age UK, Carers Trust, MND Association, the Lewy Body Society, Rethink Mental Illness and Oxfam.

    The government remains firmly committed to reforming adult social care for all, including those with caring responsibilities. In April it published the Next steps to put People at the Heart of Care plan, reflecting the enormous contribution of carers throughout and including a funding package of £25 million for unpaid carers, further details of which will be announced in due course.

    For 2023 to 2024 the Better Care Fund also earmarked £327 million to support local authorities with health and care services, including providing carers with advice, support, short breaks and respite services.

    In addition, the Care Quality Commission will be holding local authorities to account on adult social care through new assessment of the delivery of their Care Act 2014 duties, including those related to unpaid carers, such as undertaking an assessment of a carer’s needs for support.

    To better understand how unpaid carers access support, the government is looking into new ways of collecting data through a potential new survey for unpaid carers and is working with NHS England to streamline the ways unpaid carers are registered in health records. This work means the needs of carers will be more closely monitored and will inform decisions around what more can be done to provide them with the support they need.

  • PRESS RELEASE : Successful NHS programme to recruit care volunteers [June 2023]

    PRESS RELEASE : Successful NHS programme to recruit care volunteers [June 2023]

    The press release issued by the Department of Health and Social Care on 7 June 2023.

    The government is expanding the NHS Volunteer Responders programme into social care.

    • NHS Volunteer Responders Programme to be expanded into social care
    • Potential volunteers being asked to come forward to sign up for the programme in their local area
    • Volunteers to provide support to people receiving care from local services in their community

    Following the success of the NHS Volunteer Responders Programme scheme over the pandemic, the government has announced it will expand it into social care to form a joint NHS and care volunteering programme and allow care providers to recruit volunteers to help people in their local areas.

    Backed by £3 million, the scheme will use the same GoodSAM app that NHS volunteers currently use, to bring providers and volunteers together. The roles available for care volunteers are:

    • Check in and Chat Plus: contacting people who have been identified as particularly vulnerable to offer a friendly voice to those who may be experiencing loneliness
    • Pick up and Deliver: helping to transport medicines or small items of medical equipment to people’s homes or community settings from NHS sites to aid discharge from hospital or continued healthcare support
    • Community Response: collecting and delivering food shopping and essential items as well as prescriptions and medications to people in the community

    Minister for Care, Helen Whately, said:

    Volunteers can be a lifeline for people needing support. They can provide help to people needing a hand with food shopping, picking up prescriptions or even battling loneliness by lending a listening ear.

    That’s why we are building on the success of the NHS Volunteer Responders programme by expanding into social care. This launch will support the discharge of medically fit patients from hospital, freeing up the time so our workforce can focus on meeting more complex needs and most importantly support people to live independently at home for longer.

    All roles available to volunteers will help ease pressure on the health and social care system, but the Pick Up and Deliver role is specifically designed to support hospital discharge and prevent admissions.

    It will help to address challenges around pharmacies dispensing medicines – which NHS professionals cited as one of the biggest difficulties when trying to discharge patients from hospitals – as volunteers will deliver medications directly to patients, allowing them to return home sooner from hospital and removing the need to wait for prescriptions.

    Jointly delivered by the Royal Voluntary Service and GoodSAM, the expansion of the NHS programme into social care will also help to ease pressure on the NHS as volunteers will be able to step in to support people waiting to be admitted to hospital, those recently discharged and people in the community. This will free up the social care workforce enabling them to focus on those with more complex needs to live independently.

    The government is also continuing to look at ways to expand and maximise the benefit of volunteers in the NHS, such as whether it would be possible to make it easier to apply for volunteer roles by, for example, removing the requirement for employment history where this isn’t necessary.

    Volunteers can be crucial in supporting the health and care sector and complement the existing workforce. They do not replace the existing, highly valued, paid health and care staff.

    Sam Ward OBE, Deputy Chief Executive Officer of Royal Voluntary Service, said:

    The NHS Volunteer Responders scheme has been invaluable to the NHS and communities for the past 3 years. We are privileged to be taking the learning from the pandemic and extending the support of the valued volunteers to even more people and communities, working closely with social care providers and NHS England.

    Dame Ruth May, Chief Nursing Officer for England, said:

    We are delighted that this innovative volunteering programme is being expanded and look forward to seeing what positive changes this move can bring for our social care colleagues – it has been a wonderful support for the NHS over the last couple of years.

    There are a wide range of roles available which give amazing support to our patients and existing staff – we are looking for people who can help provide essentials to others who may be vulnerable, or for those who want to take a potential first step into a career in the NHS. If you are interested, we want to hear from you.

    Local authorities have been referring care recipients from the start of the NHS Volunteer Responder Programme and have found the scheme useful. Volunteer Responders will soon be able to provide support to more people in the community when other care providers, including care homes, are able to request volunteers.

    Samantha Aylott, Specialist Advisor for Adult Social Care at Essex County Council, regularly uses the Volunteer Responder programme to organise volunteer Check in and Chat calls for people as part of their social care package.

    Samantha said:

    It’s immensely helpful to be able to offer people emotional wellbeing support and the opportunity to have a friendly phone call as part of their care package. Having someone to chat to can mean a lot to the adults we work with; it’s about knowing someone cares and is interested in them.

    I would recommend the programme to other social care providers, it’s quick and easy to use.

    Maz Chafekar, 51, is from Birmingham and initially signed up as a Check in and Chat volunteer during the first lockdown. Following the relaunch of the service, Maz is once again volunteering, providing friendly phone call support to vulnerable, isolated or lonely people.

    Maz said:

    When I first heard about NHS Volunteer Responders, I believed that the role was just perfect for me. It is such a positive way to engage with people and give back to my community.

    There are so many people on their own, without anyone to turn to, and I want to give them as much support as possible. Many people are vulnerable and lonely and as a responder it’s great to know that I am helping people to overcome the challenges that they are going through. It’s very rewarding.

    A lot of people need support, and a chat can go a long way. For those who are lonely, in some cases without family or friends nearby, having someone to speak to can make such a difference to their happiness.

    I’ve had calls which start teary, but by the end of it they are smiling and feeling a lot better.

    Background

    There are 3 roles now available for volunteers to sign up to:

    • Check In and Chat Plus
    • Community Response
    • Pick Up and Deliver
  • PRESS RELEASE : Over one million NHS staff to receive pay rises from today [June 2023]

    PRESS RELEASE : Over one million NHS staff to receive pay rises from today [June 2023]

    The press release issued by the Department of Health and Social Care on 1 June 2023.

    Eligible workers on the Agenda for Change contract, which includes nurses, paramedics and 999 call handlers, will receive the pay rise, backdated to April.

    • More than one million NHS staff in England, including nurses, paramedics and 999 call handlers, will receive a pay rise, backdated to April
    • A newly qualified nurse will see their salary go up by more than £2,750 over 2 years
    • Staff will also receive a one-off ‘NHS backlog bonus’ worth at least £1,250

    From today (1 June 2023), more than one million NHS workers will start to receive a pay rise following an agreement between the government and unions.

    As part of the deal, eligible workers on the Agenda for Change contract, which includes nurses, paramedics, 999 call handlers, midwives, security guards and cleaners, will receive the pay rise, backdated to April.

    As a result of this package, a newly qualified nurse will see their salary go up by more than £2,750 over 2 years from 2021 to 2022 to 2023 to 2024. They will also receive over £1,890 in one-off payments this year.

    In addition, they will receive a one-off ‘NHS backlog bonus’ which recognises the sustained pressure facing the NHS following the pandemic and the extraordinary effort staff have been making to meet the Prime Minister’s promise to cut waiting lists.

    The backlog bonus will be worth at least £1,250 per person, but will be determined based on how much experience staff have and based on an individual’s pay band. The average nurse in pay band 5, for example, will receive £1,350.

    Health and Social Care Secretary Steve Barclay said:

    More than one million of our hard-working NHS staff will begin to receive more money in their pay packet from today, including a backlog bonus for all their efforts during the pandemic.

    We’re giving nurses, paramedics, physiotherapists and other eligible staff a fair pay rise, which will see, for example, band 6 staff getting an extra £5,000 over 2 years.

    We hugely value the work of NHS staff and the vital role they’re playing to cut waiting lists, which is one of the government’s 5 priorities, and recognise the work they put in day in and day out.

    Under the deal, eligible Agenda for Change staff will receive a non-consolidated award of 2% of an individual’s salary for 2022 to 2023. This is on top of the pay increase of at least £1,400 (pro-rated for staff working part-time) staff received for 2022 to 2023, as recommended by the independent pay review body process. This meant a newly qualified nurse received a 5.5% increase, and those on the lowest salaries received a pay rise of 9.3%.

    For 2023 to 2024, the government has given Agenda for Change staff a 5% consolidated increase in pay, worth at least £1,065.

    The deal will also provide a higher pay uplift for the lowest paid NHS staff, with all those in bands 1 and 2 having their pay raised to the same level.

    The pay increase was reached following constructive talks with unions and organisations including UNISON, GMB, the Chartered Society of Physiotherapy and the British Dietetic Association.