NHS must change in three different ways if you want to continue to save lives for years to come, said Sir Keir Starmer.
This morning, the government has issued a 10 -year plan, establishing how exactly aims to make health services in the UK suitable for the future.
This 168 -page document was launched by the Prime Minister, Chancellor Rachel Reeves, and Wes Streeting Health Secretary at the Health & Welfare Center in Stratford, East London.
Many governments have established a long -term strategy to improve NHS, but streeting says staff are still ‘crying’ for fundamental changes.
This is what you need to know about the plan.
What do we know about the NHS 10 Year Keir Starmer plan?
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This plan was first announced in September last year, after Lord Darzi issued a spicy report on the current state of health services in the UK.
Initially, the government said it would come in the spring this year, but instead was taken away to the summer to unite it.
As Darzi suggested in his report, the focus of the plan is in three main fields of change.
Analog with digital
The first change is to move the NHS from very dependent services to physical documents to those that run on a much faster digital system.
One of the basis of this approach is the NHS application, which the government wants to change into the ‘world’s leading tool for patient access, empowerment, and care planning’.
Under the plan, patients will be able to use applications to get medical advice, choose their choice provider, manage drugs, order vaccines, upload health data, and coordinate relative care.
Streeting also wants to increase the use of technology such as AI Torah to ‘free staff from their current bureaucratic and administrative burdens.
Hospital to the community
Another planned shift is from the NHS model based on the hospital today to which places a more severe focus on treatments in the local community that the government is called ‘Environmental Health Services’.
For the next three to four years, parts of health expenses used for hospitals will fall while investment in treatment outside the hospital will increase proportionally.
There is a promise to open an environmental health center, open at least 12 hours a day and 6 days a week, in every community in the UK – starting in places where the lowest healthy life expectancy.
The hospital outpatient system will end up ‘as we know’ in 2035, the plan is to say, because more urgent treatments are delivered in the community.
Pain for prevention
The third change is from a focus on healing sick people to stop people from being sick in the first place.
It involved the launch of ‘Moonshot to end the Obesity Epidemic’, with a plan for a mandatory target for health sales in the food sector and increasing the use of weight loss JAB such as Mounjaro.
Speaking to The Sun, Streeting says Jab is ‘route not only for weight loss, but lower taxes’, because people will be less dependent on NHS because they lose weight.
The element of this plan also includes a prohibition on those who are currently under 17 years old from being legally able to buy cigarettes; New standards for alcohol labeling; and increase the absorption of HPV vaccination.
The Ministry of Health said this goal would be achieved by ‘utilizing massive cross energy in prevention’.
Where did the money come from?
This morning, Keir Starmer praised Rachel Reeves – making his first public appearance since crying at PMQS yesterday – because of his work preparing land for transformation.
He said: “It all depends on the foundation that we put this year, everything reaches the renewal path we chose, the decision made by the Chancellor, by Rachel Reeves, which means we can invest the number of notes in NHS.”
But the Chancellor faces extreme pressure to find savings, and a large amount of funds needed for major changes in health services can prove challenges.
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