Britain's Prime Minister Keir Starmer during a visit to University College London Hospital. AFP
Britain's Prime Minister Keir Starmer during a visit to University College London Hospital. AFP
Britain's Prime Minister Keir Starmer during a visit to University College London Hospital. AFP
Britain's Prime Minister Keir Starmer during a visit to University College London Hospital. AFP

Keir Starmer's reform plan to plug NHS health gap


Thomas Harding
  • English
  • Arabic

Prime Minister Keir Starmer has said there is no more money for Britain’s National Health Service without widescale reform.

As part of a ten-year plan to transform the NHS and put millions of Britons back to work, the Labour leader made a key speech highlighting the service's failures, along with a three-point plan to reform it.

While blaming the 14 years of Conservative rule for the NHS’s parlous position, Mr Starmer warned that the failures in the system, which have been blamed for 14,000 premature deaths a year, would take at least ten years to fix.

More money would be poured into the service after it is rapidly digitalised, more people are moved into community care and prevention is used as a key element to cut down hospital numbers.

His warnings came following a two-month deep dive inquiry into the health service’s state by the Iraqi-born peer and former surgeon Ara Darsi who concluded that the NHS was in a “critical condition”.

Golden inheritance blown

Two months into his premiership, Mr Starmer is continuing his pattern of explaining Britain’s current poor state by blaming it on the 14 years of Conservative rule.

He said the country had, when the Tories took power in 2010, been handed a “golden inheritance” of an NHS with short waiting lists and a content staff.

But that had been squandered with ill-advised reforms in 2012 that had been “unforgivable, and people have every right to be angry” over lack of care.

There are currently 7.6 million people waiting for hospital treatment a considerable increase from 2.4 million in 2010.

Ten-year plan - digitial, neighbourly, prevention

The government is working on a ten-year plan that entails “three fundamental reforms”, key of which would be moving from analogue to digital NHS.

More than 12,000 patients were in beds – “enough to fill 28 hospitals” – because there is no provision for them to be looked after at home, the Prime Minister said.

Britain needed to turn its NHS “into a neighbourhood health service” with tests, scans and healthcare offered on the high street along with the return of the family doctor.

Thirdly there needed to be long-term investment in new technologies to catch and prevent problems much earlier, including NHS health checks in workplaces including blood pressure tests.

“The NHS may be broken, but it's not beaten,” Mr Starmer said, but with an ageing population it was at a critical junction where the choice was “don’t act and leave it to die” or “reform or die”.

Cancer care

Lord Ara Darzi, the widely respected surgeon born in Baghdad to Armenian parents, was forensic and eviscerating in his 142-page condemnation of the NHS.

Declining cancer care meant British patients had “significantly worse survival rates” than other countries, with only two-thirds of patients treated within two months of referral.

“The UK has appreciably higher cancer mortality rates than other countries,” he wrote. “No progress whatsoever was made in diagnosing cancer at stage I and II between 2013 and 2021.”

Research showed that only about 5 per cent of eligible patients with brain cancer were able to access whole genome sequencing, which was key to treatment selection.

In addition, more than 30 per cent of patients were waiting longer than 31 days for radical radiotherapy.

Heart failure

Heart disease treatment had “gone in the wrong direction” since 2010 and heart attack victims had to wait 146 minutes on average for emergency artery procedures, up from 114 minutes in 2013, the report found.

Cardiovascular disease mortality rate for people aged under 75 dropped significantly between 2001 and 2010 but improvements “have stalled since then” and the mortality rate started rising during the Covid-19 pandemic.

Quick access to treatment has declined and the percentage of suspected stroke patients to receive the necessary brain scan within an hour of hospital arrival varied from 80 per cent in Kent to just 40 per cent in Shropshire.

Waiting times for accident and emergency units have increased so considerably that patients now have 100 people ahead of them in the queue when attending, up from 40 people in 2009.

Lord Darzi stated that the NHS, which is the world’s fifth largest employer with 1.7 million staff, despite a £165 billion budget – about 40 per cent of Britain’s GDP - with “more resources than ever before” it was “in an awful state”.

Patients queue outside the Accident and Emergency department in north London. PA
Patients queue outside the Accident and Emergency department in north London. PA

Staff disengaged

While staff numbers had risen by 17 per cent since 2019, productivity had decreased by 11 per cent due to a lack of beds and diagnostics.

“Too many staff are disengaged,” the report said. “There are distressingly high-levels of sickness absence – as much as one working month a year for each nurse and each midwife.”

The pandemic had been “exhausting for many and its aftermath continues to reverberate” as NHS staff not only mourned deaths of their colleagues but had to abide by grim Covid rules. This included mothers forced to give birth alone and elderly patients who “had to die without the comforting touch of their loved ones”.

The voices of patients were also “not loud enough” and the NHS needed to treat them “with dignity, compassion and respect”.

Yet patient satisfaction had declined, and complaints increased with a number of failings not acted upon. As a result, the NHS was paying out record sums in compensation which currently total £3 billion or 1.7 per cent of the entire NHS budget.

Reform or we die

Britain's Prime Minister Keir Starmer delivers a speech in London, Thursday Sept. 12, 2024. (Isabel Infantes / Pool Photo via AP)
Britain's Prime Minister Keir Starmer delivers a speech in London, Thursday Sept. 12, 2024. (Isabel Infantes / Pool Photo via AP)

A leading health professor at University College London, Dr Ilan Kelman, told The National that it was not a question of “reform or die” for the NHS, as Mr Starmer stated, but for the NHS to reform "or we will continue to die”.

“It's the staff of the NHS in particular who are the most vocal about saying that the NHS is not serving us,” he said. "Doctors are exhausted. Nurses are overworked. The wards are not sufficient to keep people alive.”

But he welcomed Mr Starmer’s plans to reform the service as “people are dying in large numbers when it should be treatable, preventable and dealt with”.

In particular, digitalisation as healthcare staff were “using post it notes when they should be using secure digital services”.

While the 10-year plan was “too long” it was probably the length of time needed for proper reform.

“Currently the NHS is not fit for purpose as it really has been underfunded and deprioritised for far too long across successive governments,” he said.

Victoria Atkins, the former Conservative health secretary, condemned the government’s report as “political posturing”, saying there was “much to be proud of” in the NHS especially as it was looking after 1.6 million people a day, 25 per cent more than in 2010.

But an NHS manager based in southern England told The National that staff had “a lot of trust” in Lord Darzi and that his report was “broadly accurate”.

“What we need is for the NHS to ‘pull’ people out of hospitals into communities rather than ‘push’ them,” he said. “They should be given 48 or 72 hours to recover before returning home and they really need to get behind this issue of taking care of people in the communities.”

He added that the government should not focus on a ten-year plan as it could be scuppered by parliamentary elections in five years. “They should aim to get 80 per cent of the work done in three years then do the rest if they get re-elected,” he said.

Dates for the diary

To mark Bodytree’s 10th anniversary, the coming season will be filled with celebratory activities:

  • September 21 Anyone interested in becoming a certified yoga instructor can sign up for a 250-hour course in Yoga Teacher Training with Jacquelene Sadek. It begins on September 21 and will take place over the course of six weekends.
  • October 18 to 21 International yoga instructor, Yogi Nora, will be visiting Bodytree and offering classes.
  • October 26 to November 4 International pilates instructor Courtney Miller will be on hand at the studio, offering classes.
  • November 9 Bodytree is hosting a party to celebrate turning 10, and everyone is invited. Expect a day full of free classes on the grounds of the studio.
  • December 11 Yogeswari, an advanced certified Jivamukti teacher, will be visiting the studio.
  • February 2, 2018 Bodytree will host its 4th annual yoga market.
MISSION: IMPOSSIBLE – FINAL RECKONING

Director: Christopher McQuarrie

Starring: Tom Cruise, Hayley Atwell, Simon Pegg

Rating: 4/5

The burning issue

The internal combustion engine is facing a watershed moment – major manufacturer Volvo is to stop producing petroleum-powered vehicles by 2021 and countries in Europe, including the UK, have vowed to ban their sale before 2040. The National takes a look at the story of one of the most successful technologies of the last 100 years and how it has impacted life in the UAE. 

Read part four: an affection for classic cars lives on

Read part three: the age of the electric vehicle begins

Read part one: how cars came to the UAE

 

The burning issue

The internal combustion engine is facing a watershed moment – major manufacturer Volvo is to stop producing petroleum-powered vehicles by 2021 and countries in Europe, including the UK, have vowed to ban their sale before 2040. The National takes a look at the story of one of the most successful technologies of the last 100 years and how it has impacted life in the UAE.

Read part three: the age of the electric vehicle begins

Read part two: how climate change drove the race for an alternative 

Read part one: how cars came to the UAE

UAE currency: the story behind the money in your pockets

Meatless Days
Sara Suleri, with an introduction by Kamila Shamsie
​​​​​​​Penguin 

The years Ramadan fell in May

1987

1954

1921

1888

War and the virus
About Karol Nawrocki

• Supports military aid for Ukraine, unlike other eurosceptic leaders, but he will oppose its membership in western alliances.

• A nationalist, his campaign slogan was Poland First. "Let's help others, but let's take care of our own citizens first," he said on social media in April.

• Cultivates tough-guy image, posting videos of himself at shooting ranges and in boxing rings.

• Met Donald Trump at the White House and received his backing.

LA LIGA FIXTURES

Thursday (All UAE kick-off times)

Sevilla v Real Betis (midnight)

Friday

Granada v Real Betis (9.30pm)

Valencia v Levante (midnight)

Saturday

Espanyol v Alaves (4pm)

Celta Vigo v Villarreal (7pm)

Leganes v Real Valladolid (9.30pm)

Mallorca v Barcelona (midnight)

Sunday

Atletic Bilbao v Atletico Madrid (4pm)

Real Madrid v Eibar (9.30pm)

Real Sociedad v Osasuna (midnight)

Blackpink World Tour [Born Pink] In Cinemas

Starring: Rose, Jisoo, Jennie, Lisa

Directors: Min Geun, Oh Yoon-Dong

Rating: 3/5

Essentials

The flights
Whether you trek after mountain gorillas in Rwanda, Uganda or the Congo, the most convenient international airport is in Rwanda’s capital city, Kigali. There are direct flights from Dubai a couple of days a week with RwandAir. Otherwise, an indirect route is available via Nairobi with Kenya Airways. Flydubai flies to Kinshasa in the Democratic Republic of Congo, via Entebbe in Uganda. Expect to pay from US$350 (Dh1,286) return, including taxes.
The tours
Superb ape-watching tours that take in all three gorilla countries mentioned above are run by Natural World Safaris. In September, the company will be operating a unique Ugandan ape safari guided by well-known primatologist Ben Garrod.
In the Democratic Republic of Congo, local operator Kivu Travel can organise pretty much any kind of safari throughout the Virunga National Park and elsewhere in eastern Congo.

Jetour T1 specs

Engine: 2-litre turbocharged

Power: 254hp

Torque: 390Nm

Price: From Dh126,000

Available: Now

UAE currency: the story behind the money in your pockets
Brief scores:

Everton 2

Walcott 21', Sigurdsson 51'

Tottenham 6

Son 27', 61', Alli 35', Kane 42', 74', Eriksen 48'​​​​​​​

Man of the Match: Son Heung-min (Tottenham Hotspur)

The five pillars of Islam

1. Fasting

2. Prayer

3. Hajj

4. Shahada

5. Zakat 

The burning issue

The internal combustion engine is facing a watershed moment – major manufacturer Volvo is to stop producing petroleum-powered vehicles by 2021 and countries in Europe, including the UK, have vowed to ban their sale before 2040. The National takes a look at the story of one of the most successful technologies of the last 100 years and how it has impacted life in the UAE. 

Read part four: an affection for classic cars lives on

Read part three: the age of the electric vehicle begins

Read part two: how climate change drove the race for an alternative 

While you're here
BIGGEST CYBER SECURITY INCIDENTS IN RECENT TIMES

SolarWinds supply chain attack: Came to light in December 2020 but had taken root for several months, compromising major tech companies, governments and its entities

Microsoft Exchange server exploitation: March 2021; attackers used a vulnerability to steal emails

Kaseya attack: July 2021; ransomware hit perpetrated REvil, resulting in severe downtime for more than 1,000 companies

Log4j breach: December 2021; attackers exploited the Java-written code to inflitrate businesses and governments

Updated: September 12, 2024, 5:14 PM`