World Leisure Jobs - UK government slammed over failure to increase spending on prevention...
05 May 2024 World leisure: news, training & property
 
 
HOME
JOBS
NEWS
FEATURES
PRODUCTS
FREE DIGITAL SUBSCRIPTION
PRINT SUBSCRIPTION
ADVERTISE
CONTACT US
Sign up for FREE ezine
Latest news

21 Jul 2023

UK government slammed over failure to increase spending on prevention
BY Tom Walker

The Hewitt Review called for an increased focus on prevention

The Hewitt Review called for an increased focus on prevention
photo: Shutterstock/ALPA PROD

Local government organisations and industry thought leaders have slammed the UK government’s decision not to increase funding for prevention.

The Hewitt Review: an independent review of integrated care systems (ICS), published earlier this year, made a recommendation to increase the proportion of public resources spent on prevention.

The review – led by former Labour health secretary, Patricia Hewitt – set out to consider the oversight and governance of the ICS network.

In the report, Hewitt said: "I recommend the share of total NHS budgets at ICS level going towards prevention should be increased by at least 1 per cent over the next five years.

"Given the constraints on the nation’s finances, this is my most challenging recommendation," she said, "but an ambition of this kind is essential if we are to avoid simply another round of rhetorical commitment to prevention."

Now, in its response to the Hewitt Review, the UK's Department of Health and Social Care said: "The government agrees that... the focus for the NHS should increasingly shift towards implementing evidence-based interventions to help improve prevention and support healthier life expectancy, however, we do not agree with imposing a national expectation of an "essentially arbitrary" shift in spending.

The government has instead committed to a review of methodology for "developing definitions for preventative healthcare spending" and also to "exploring options for local baselining".

Once this process has concluded it has said it will consider publishing this information, but it stopped short of a commitment to do so.

Sir Muir Gray, author of How to get better value health care, said: "This is an incorrect value judgement. We could get more value from tax payers' money if less was spent on tests and treatments that do no good, and more was spent on prevention.

"A UK government report – Good for you, good for us, good for everyone – a plan to reduce overprescribing, concluded that at least 10 per cent of all drugs prescribed either don't work or actually cause harm and that 20 per cent of hospital admissions are as a result of drug side-effects. All this costs £1bn a year that could be redeployed for prevention.

"Doctors are currently not allowed to shift spending from drugs to prevention, so they end up prescribing drugs because they don't have an option to refer people for preventative services – such as physical activity. If they had prevention-related options, less would need to be spent on drugs, reducing the likelihood of side-effects and freeing up resources.

"I agree that the 1 per cent recommended by the Hewitt Review can be seen as arbitrary, but that's not the point – the Hewitt Review was seeking to establish an important principle in regards to shifting resources. Once that principle is agreed, the actual amount needed can be nailed down.

"The current system isn't giving us what we need: it's wasteful and is using resources that would give better value if used for prevention," said Gray.

Liz Terry, editor of HCM magazine said: "We know that around 85 per cent of all disease is lifestyle-related and so a government agenda based on prevention would not only deliver dramatically better value to UK tax payers, it would also transform lives as people would not succumb to preventable, life-shortening health conditions in the first place.

"We call on the UK government to review this unfortunate decision, accept the principle that prevention must be an important part of the health agenda and to take action to make it happen, in partnership with the physical activity and wellness sectors."

The Local Government Association (LGA) described the government's decision not to focus on prevention as "disappointing".

"We're disappointed that the Government has rejected the Hewitt Review's suggestion to grow spend on prevention by 1 per cent per year," said David Baines, vice-chair of the LGA's community wellbeing board.

"Historically, prevention has always been overshadowed by the immediate funding challenges for acute and hospital care, but without resources specifically earmarked for prevention, we won't see the radical step change in NHS investment that's required to turn the curve on a growing burden of ill-health and long-term conditions."

The Hewitt Review
Each ICS has an integrated care board – a statutory organisation responsible for developing plans for meeting the health needs of the population, managing NHS budgets and arranging for the provision of health services in their area.

In the report, Hewitt said: "We are currently not creating the best health value that we could from the current investment in the NHS. Instead of viewing health and care as a cost, we need to align all partners, locally and nationally, around the creation of health value.

"NHS funding remains over-focused on treatment of illness or injury rather than prevention of them and ICS partners struggle to work around over-complex, uncoordinated funding systems and rules in order to shift resource to where it is most needed.

"Instead, it is important to identify the most effective payment models, nationally and internationally, with an aim to implement a new model with population-based budgets, which will incentivise and enable better outcomes and significantly improve productivity.

"There should also be a review into the NHS capital regime to address the inflexibility in use of capital and the layering of different capital allocations and approvals processes. NHS England should also ensure that systems are able to draw upon a full range of improvement resources to support them to understand their productivity, finance and quality challenges and opportunities.

"Many of us have talked over many decades about the need to focus on prevention, population health and health inequalities. We have called for a shift from a top-down, centralised system of managing the NHS to a bottom-up systemresponsive and responsible to local communities and engaging the enthusiasm, knowledge and creativity of staff along with patients, carers and volunteers.

"The creation of primary care trusts and then clinical commissioning groups were attempts to do exactly that, but each was reorganised and swept away in their turn.

"Prevention, population health management and tackling health inequalities are not a distraction from the immediate priorities: indeed, they are the key to sustainable solutions to those immediate performance challenges," she concluded.

To read the Hewitt Review, click here.

To read the UK government's response, click here.



Connect with
World Leisure
Magazine:
View issue contents
Sign up:
Instant Alerts/zines

Print edition
 

News headlines
John Kersh joins Crunch Fitness following exit from Xponential
John Kersh joins Crunch Fitness following exit from Xponential   04 May 2024

US gym chain, Crunch Fitness, has bolstered its global expansion plans with the appointment of John Kersh as managing director of international .... more>>
Breakers Hotel in Long Beach to relaunch as Fairmont property with tech-forward spa in 2024
Breakers Hotel in Long Beach to relaunch as Fairmont property with tech-forward spa in 2024   03 May 2024

The historic Breakers Hotel in Long Beach, California, is set to reopen in mid-2024 as a Fairmont Hotels & Resorts property after a significant .... more>>
Kempinski to make Vietnamese debut with riverside resort and spa designed by Kengo Kuma
Kempinski to make Vietnamese debut with riverside resort and spa designed by Kengo Kuma   03 May 2024

High-end five-star hotel company Kempinski Hotels is making its mark in Vietnam with a luxury waterfront property overlooking the Saigon River. Set .... more>>
Belgian start-up, Moonbird, is on a mission to teach the world to breathe
Belgian start-up, Moonbird, is on a mission to teach the world to breathe   02 May 2024

Moonbird is a tactile breathing coach, which provides real-time biofeedback, measuring heart rate and heart rate variability. Studies show it can .... more>>
Company profile


TechnoAlpin

TechnoAlpin is the world leader for snowmaking systems. Our product portfolio includes all different types of snow-making equipment for outdoor and innovative holistic solutions for indoor applications.

View full profile>>

Catalogue gallery


Featured Supplier

CSI Design Expo Americas 2024 announces new Attractions & Entertainment Technology Zone

CSI Design Expo Americas 2024 announces new Attractions & Entertainment Technology Zone

Cruise Ship Interiors (CSI) invites cruise lines, shipyards, design studios, outfitters, and suppliers to take part in CSI Design Expo Americas in Miami, Florida, the region’s only event dedicated to cruise ship interior design. More>>




in this issue

• Virgin gets right to wipe out rent arrears
• Fitness industry mourns passing of Jan Spaticchia
• STA offers mindfulness resources



World Leisure jobs




Duty Manager
Salary: Competitive
Location: Middlesbrough
Company: Everyone Active
Duty Manager Golf and Athletics
Salary: £30,027pa + non-contrib pension + benefits
Location: Stockwood Park Golf Club, London Road, Luton, UK
Company: Active Luton
Leisure Centre Duty Manager
Salary: £24,687.57pa + pension + health care + benefits
Location: Uppingham, Oakham, UK
Company: Uppingham School
Leisure Supervisor (Development)
Salary: £32,982 - £37,099pa + excellent pension and benefits
Location: London, UK
Company: City University of London
Diary dates
Powered by leisurediary.com

08-08 May 2024

Hospitality Design Conference

Hotel Melià , Milano , Italy


10-12 May 2024

Asia Pool & Spa Expo

China Import & Export Fair Complex, Guangzhou, China







Published by Leisure Media Tel: +44 (0)1462 431385 | Contact us | About us | © Cybertrek Ltd