Former minister calls for new tax to save NHS and social care
A dramatic call for a new health and care tax has been made by a former Tory health minister, amid demands by MPs of all parties for Theresa May to act to save the NHS and the social care system from collapse.
Dr Dan Poulter, who stepped down from the Department of Health last year and now works both as an MP and as a part-time NHS doctor, said his experience inside hospitals had convinced him that radical, long-term funding solutions for the health and care sectors are “urgently required”.
He told the Observer: “On the hospital wards I often see people who are medically fit to go home, but who are forced to stay in hospital because of difficulties arranging their social care package or because of a lack of appropriate housing. Good healthcare cannot be delivered without properly funded social care.
“A long-term plan to ensure a properly funded and sustainable health and social care system is urgently required, and I believe a health and care tax – perhaps introduced through raising national insurance – offers one of the simplest ways forward.”
Poulter spoke out amid growing frustration about a lack of clarity in the government’s approach to social care and how to fund it, as the number of elderly people soars and pressures on hospital services mount. In the Tory manifesto last year, former prime minister David Cameron promised to introduce a cap of £72,000 on the care costs for each individual, after which the state would pay. But soon after polling day, he delayed the scheme’s introduction until 2020, because money was not available.
Poulter, who was responsible for steering the plan for a cap through parliament, said that with public finances unlikely to improve, the much-vaunted policy had little chance of being implemented: “Given that the introduction of a cap was considered unaffordable a year ago, and that the costs of social care continue to increase, there is now little prospect of the cap being introduced at all.” What the NHS and care systems need, he said, is a special tax that will guarantee an income stream, rather than policies like the cap which are entirely dependent on the economic climate of the moment.
“Linking tax income with health and care spending would give people the opportunity to see how their money is being spent, and allow a legitimate debate about what is an appropriate level of taxation required to ensure a sustainable funding settlement for our NHS and social care system in the years ahead,” Poulter said.
Echoing his call for a new approach from government that would offer long-term security of funding, Richard Murray, director of policy at health thinktank the King’s Fund, said: “Tackling the growing crisis in social care will be a key test of the prime minister’s promise of a country that works for everyone, and must move much higher up the government’s agenda.
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