9.9 C
New York
Wednesday, January 29, 2025
HomeUK NewsLabour unveils plan to save funds and reform NHS

Labour unveils plan to save funds and reform NHS

Date:

Related stories

UK Trade Secretary to visit India in February for FTA talks

UK Business and Trade Secretary Jonathan Reynolds will visit...

Gatwick’s second runway bid could undermine Heathrow expansion plans

The debate over UK airport expansion has heated up...

UK government to launch local inquiries into child sexual exploitation

The UK government has announced a national review to...

Asian entrepreneurs back Conservatives with major donations

Asian businesses and individuals contributed significantly more to the...

Musk withdraws support for Farage, calls for leadership change in Reform UK

Elon Musk has publicly urged Nigel Farage to step...

THE Labour party said it would aim to save £10 billion by cutting waste and reforming the health service if in power, saying these measures could free up cash to spend on frontline care.

The NHS emerged from the Covid-19 pandemic in crisis, crippled by long waiting lists, ambulance delays and industrial action by staff over pay.

Prime minister Rishi Sunak had pledged to cut waiting lists as one of his five priorities, but has blamed the strikes for missing that target.

Labour’s plans to reform rather than simply spend more on the NHS has prompted criticism from some unions.

But the shadow health secretary, Wes Streeting, who has vowed to face down those hostile to his reform agenda, said the plan would ultimately result in more money for frontline services.

- Advertisement -

“After 14 years of Conservative neglect of the NHS, we are paying more but getting less,” he said in a speech on Tuesday (23), according to extracts released by Labour. “I am focusing on waste because I want to give the public hope that the NHS can be saved.

“The money that is wasted today can be used to get the NHS back on its feet tomorrow. Only Labour has a plan to reform the NHS.”

Labour said it could save £3.5 billion by ending payments to recruitment agencies to cover staffing shortfalls. A further £1.7bn could come by freeing up hospital beds currently occupied by patients who can’t be sent home due to a lack of available care in the community.

However, the NHS Confederation, which represents organisations across the healthcare sector, cautioned against budget cuts to a service that is already struggling due to under-investment.

“Capital budgets are already being raided to plug rising deficits in the dayto-day NHS budget caused by strikes and other cost pressures,” the NHS Confederation said.

Labour has previously set out plans to integrate health and social care, and recruit and retain more carers.

The government has responsibility for the NHS only in England as health is a devolved policy area in Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland.

Subscribe

- Never miss a story with notifications

- Gain full access to our premium content

- Browse free from up to 5 devices at once

Latest stories