NHS Finance

06.03.17

BMA calls for £10bn budget boost to match European health spending

The UK should follow the example of other leading economies and provide £10bn extra funding for health care when Phillip Hammond announces the Spring Budget on Wednesday, a letter penned by British Medical Association (BMA) chair Dr Mark Porter has stated.

Dr Porter had written the letter to the chancellor in the hope that the government will listen to the warnings from the union and match the average health spending of Europe’s top 10 economies of 10.4% of their GDP as opposed to Britain’s current level which stands at 9.8%.

The definition for spend by GDP takes into account the average consumption of healthcare goods and services including personal healthcare, rehabilitative and long-term care, as well as health administration and public health agencies.

Had the UK matched this level of funding in 2015, the NHS would have enjoyed £10.3bn more funds to support healthcare and increase the number of beds as well as employ more GPs for frontline care services, Dr Porter argued. Half of this amount, he stated, could have gone to providing 35,000 more hospital beds whilst a further £3bn of the fund could have been used to increase the number of GPs in the country by 10,000, covering costs for doctors, associated staff and premises costs.

In the letter, he wrote: “The crisis facing the NHS and social care is well known and becoming increasingly severe – the government cannot remain a bystander any longer.

“An entire system under such strain is not due to frontline financial mismanagement, or individual chief executives’ poor decision making, it is due to the conscious underinvestment in our health service.”

Dr Porter also spoke on behalf of the BMA’s members, who have reported that services were close to breaking point with unprecedented rising patient demand being met with financial restraint and directives for the NHS and social care to make, as he describes it “huge, unachievable savings through sustainability and transformation plans across England”.

He added: “We are not calling for more than other comparable nations, we are simply calling for you to match the average spending of other leading European economies.”

Dr Porter’s call for funding comes just days after the Public Accounts Committee published a report which said politicians and health leaders must find money for the NHS organisations that are being hit the hardest as well as come up with a “transparent and clear” transformation plan for the future.

A CQC report into the state of NHS hospital trusts also warned that a lack of funds for NHS hospitals meant that they were currently standing on a “burning platform” where trusts could not cope with high demand for services, leading to “blind spots” being created where care was not delivered to a high standard in certain core services.

NHS organisations have also echoed Porter's call for extra health funding, as NHS Confederation also repeated the message that the NHS required additional funding to deliver high quality care to patients in the future. 

A spokesperson for NHS Confederation said: "We understand that the government has spared the NHS from some of the more severe cuts affecting other parts of the public sector, but this same period has witnessed unprecedented rising demand and unprecedented low growth in health spending.

"The NHS has managed better over the last few years than many predicted – it has been more resilient and done well to deliver the current levels and quality of service.

"But there is a need for a frank admission about the limitations as to what patients can expect, and a willingness at national level to acknowledge that services must be able to prioritise what they can and cannot provide."

The organisation also expressed the need to address the crisis in social care, saying that the sector had been "ignored and underfunded", adding that "we are now at a critical point where local councils despite their best efforts are incapable of keeping up with demand, leaving more than one million older people in real need without any support whatsoever and health services, including mental health, overwhelmed". 

NHS Confederation concluded: "The NHS and local government must play their part – funding should be conditional on reform, joined up services on the ground, and an absolute commitment to patients and others who use services rather than sectional or organisational interests.” 

A DH spokesperson said: "We are committed to the NHS, which is why total health spending is above the OECD average as a percentage of GDP, and why we are investing £10 billion in the NHS's own plan for the future, including almost £4 billion this year.

They added: "What's more, the NHS was ranked the best and most efficient healthcare system in the world by the independent Commonwealth Fund, showing that we make every bit of spending count”.

Have you got a story to tell? Would you like to become an NHE columnist? If so, click here.

Comments

There are no comments. Why not be the first?

Add your comment

national health executive tv

more videos >

latest healthcare news

NHS England commits £30m to join up HR and staff rostering systems

09/09/2020NHS England commits £30m to join up HR and staff rostering systems

As NHS England looks to support new ways of working, it has launched a £30m contract tender for HR and staff rostering systems, seeking sup... more >
Gender equality in NHS leadership requires further progress

09/09/2020Gender equality in NHS leadership requires further progress

New research carried out by the University of Exeter, on behalf of NHS Confederation, has shown that more progress is still needed to achieve gen... more >
NHS Trust set for big savings in shift to digital patient letters

09/09/2020NHS Trust set for big savings in shift to digital patient letters

Up and down the country, NHS trusts are finding new and innovative ways to leverage the power of digital technologies. In Bradford, paper appoint... more >

editor's comment

26/06/2020Adapting and Innovating

Matt Roberts, National Health Executive Editorial Lead. NHE May/June 2020 Edition We’ve been through so much as a health sector and a society in recent months with coronavirus and nothing can take away from the loss and difficulties that we’ve faced but it vital we also don’t disregard the amazing efforts we’ve witnessed. Staff have gone above and beyond, whole hospitals and trusts have flexed virtually at w... read more >

last word

Haseeb Ahmad: ‘We all have a role to play in getting innovations quicker’

Haseeb Ahmad: ‘We all have a role to play in getting innovations quicker’

Haseeb Ahmad, president of the Association of the British Pharmaceutical Industry (ABPI), sits down with National Health Executive as part of our Last Word Q&A series. Would you talk us th... more > more last word articles >

the scalpel's daily blog

Covid-19 can signal a new deal with the public on health

28/08/2020Covid-19 can signal a new deal with the public on health

Danny Mortimer, Chief Executive, NHS Employers & Deputy Chief Executive, NHS Confederation The common enemy of coronavirus united the public side by side with the NHS in a way that many had not seen in their lifetimes and for others evoked war-time memories. It was an image of defiance personified by the unforgettable N... more >
read more blog posts from 'the scalpel' >

comment

NHS England dementia director prescribes rugby for mental health and dementia patients

23/09/2019NHS England dementia director prescribes rugby for mental health and dementia patients

Reason to celebrate as NHS says watching rugby can be good for your mental health and wellbeing. As the best rugby players in the world repr... more >
Peter Kyle MP: It’s time to say thank you this Public Service Day

21/06/2019Peter Kyle MP: It’s time to say thank you this Public Service Day

Taking time to say thank you is one of the hidden pillars of a society. Being on the receiving end of some “thanks” can make communit... more >
Nurses named as least-appreciated public sector workers

13/06/2019Nurses named as least-appreciated public sector workers

Nurses have been named as the most under-appreciated public sector professionals as new research reveals how shockingly under-vauled our NHS, edu... more >
Creating the Cardigan integrated care centre

10/06/2019Creating the Cardigan integrated care centre

Peter Skitt, county director and commissioner for Ceredigion Hywel Dda University Health Board, looks ahead to the new integrated care centre bei... more >

interviews

Matt Hancock says GP recruitment is on the rise to support ‘bedrock of the NHS’

24/10/2019Matt Hancock says GP recruitment is on the rise to support ‘bedrock of the NHS’

Today, speaking at the Royal College of General Practitioners (RCGP) annual conference, Matt Hancock highlighted what he believes to be the three... more >
NHS dreams come true for Teesside domestic

17/09/2019NHS dreams come true for Teesside domestic

Over 20 years ago, a Teesside hospital cleaner put down her mop and took steps towards her midwifery dreams. Lisa Payne has been delivering ... more >
How can winter pressures be dealt with? Introduce a National Social Care Service, RCP president suggests

24/10/2018How can winter pressures be dealt with? Introduce a National Social Care Service, RCP president suggests

A dedicated national social care service could be a potential solution to surging demand burdening acute health providers over the winter months,... more >
RCP president on new Liverpool college building: ‘This will be a hub for clinicians in the north’

24/10/2018RCP president on new Liverpool college building: ‘This will be a hub for clinicians in the north’

The president of the Royal College of Physicians (RCP) has told NHE that the college’s new headquarters based in Liverpool will become a hu... more >

health service focus

View all News