One trouble with dropping targets is that such a decision tends to create a target. The head of NHS England, Simon Stevens, has outlined many sensible goals in his proposals for the future of the health service. But attention has focused on one thing. In order to take the strain off A&E departments and improve cancer treatment, Stevens has decided to drop the target whereby 92% of routine surgery is carried out within 18 weeks of a GP referral. The moment that some ghastly failure can be personalised in the form of an iconic victim of this change, Stevens will be held personally responsible. He is the target now.
Why is Stevens taking this risk? Largely because the government has made it clear that the extra funding Stevens needs will not be forthcoming. But it’s also another attempt at a nudge, to GPs and to patients. People can be aggressively passive about their health. They want doctors to fix it for them. GPs are wary of berating patients into losing weight and exercising more, especially now, when patients have read on the internet all about the operation they can get. The promise of elective surgery within 18 weeks, I’m afraid, only encourages both GP and patient to kick the can down the road. The hope is that the removal of the target will encourage GPs and patients to opt first for physiotherapy, which is what all sensible people should be doing anyway.
Some of the problem is with us, and our demands. We trail off to the GP with our colds and beg for antibiotics
Around 150 urgent treatment centres are being planned, to take the strain off A&E, which NHS chiefs say still attracts about 3 million people each year with minor ailments. Stevens is hoping to persuade all GP practices to offer evening and weekend appointments, so that A&E departments don’t become one-stop-shops over the weekend. Astoundingly, Stevens is also demanding that all A&E departments should introduce “comprehensive front-door clinical streaming”. Here in my metropolitan elite bubble, I’d imagined that all A&E departments had been assessing all walk-ins by medical need for decades. It’s easy to forget just how much sheer inertia is inevitable when dealing with a beast as large and complex as the NHS.
Stevens also addresses the system’s two most glaring failures – the lack of integration with social care and the relatively slender access to mental health services. On the first, Stevens aims, through closer coordination between hospitals and councils, to free up potentially 3,000 hospital beds. On the second, the aim is to provide talking therapies to 200,000 more people. These are ambitious goals. Considering the lack of investment, they are valiantly optimistic. Sometimes, people doing tough work need a bit of encouragement and applause. Stevens is one of them.
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