Daily Mail

Top NHS trust boss quits over lack of funding

- By Sophie Borland Health Editor

THE head of one of the country’s largest hospitals has resigned, blaming a lack of NHS funding.

Lord Kerslake has quit as chairman of King’s College Hospital in south London, claiming that the health service needed a ‘ fundamenta­l rethink’ over how it was funded.

Stressing that hospitals were facing ‘inexorable pressures’, his resignatio­n comes less than three weeks after the Budget, when Chancellor Philip Hammond allocated an additional £2.8billion to the NHS. This was a third of the amount that health experts – including NHS England chief executive Simon Stevens – had wanted.

Earlier this month the health service said that, as a result, patients would be denied routine prescripti­ons and breakthrou­gh medicines.

Lord Kerslake, who was previously the head of the civil service, is a highly respected crossbench peer. He was appointed chairman of King’s, an internatio­nally renowned teaching hospital, in April 2015.

Announcing his resignatio­n last night, Lord Kerslake said: ‘My twoand-a-half years at King’s have been in equal parts inspiring and frustratin­g. There are undoubtedl­y things that I and the trust could have done better – there always are – but fundamenta­lly our problems lie in the way the NHS is funded and organised.

‘We desperatel­y need a fundamenta­l rethink. Until then, we are simply kicking the can down the road.’

Later this week, NHS Improvemen­t, the hospital watchdog, is expected to put King’s in special measures for failing to hit financial targets.

Lord Kerslake said the trust had successful­ly cut spending on agency staff and improved cancer waiting times. But the trust’s financial position was made worse when it took over a struggling hospital nearby, the Princess Royal University Hospital in Bromley, south London, in 2014. Despite this, Lord Kerslake said the hospital had made savings of £80million in each of the two years since he was appointed – twice the average of other hospitals.

In an article for the Guardian, he said: ‘The Government and its regulator NHS Improvemen­t are simply not facing up to the enormous challenges the NHS is currently facing.’

‘Falling apart at the seams’

ONE in three family doctors plan to close their surgeries to new patients, a survey found.

They claim that without drastic action they will be unable to give safe care to those already on their books.

One in ten GPs said they had already closed surgery lists to new patients temporaril­y within the past 12 months.

A further 28 per cent – nearly a third – admitted they were considerin­g doing so.

GP surgeries are under huge strain from the ageing population – with many more patients having complex illnesses – as well as immigratio­n. They are also in the grip of a recruitmen­t crisis, with an exodus of doctors retiring or quitting who are not being replaced by young trainees.

Doctors’ leaders say the only way surgeries can cope with the pressure is to refuse to accept new patients. It means anyone moving into the area cannot register with their local practice and must travel further to find a surgery where the list is still open.

NHS guidelines forbid GPs from closing their lists unless they have been granted special approval from their local health board on patient safety grounds.

Figures from NHS England show that 145 surgeries were given permission in 2016/17, although a total of 231 surgeries had applied.

But a survey of 500 ‘partner’ GPs – senior doctors in charge of surgeries – suggests hundreds of others are closing their lists informally, without approval.

According to the poll by Pulse, a website for GPs, 9 per cent had temporaril­y stopped accepting new patients in 2016/17, with or without permission.

If the findings are representa­tive for the 7,700 surgeries in England, then almost 700 closed their lists. Another 28 per cent of partner GPs said they were considerin­g closing their lists. Some said they were taking legal advice on whether to defy NHS England’s orders to remain open.

The situation is so dire in Folkestone, Kent, that all seven GP practices have asked to close their lists. They applied to the South Kent Coast Clinical Commission- ing Group for permission in September but were refused. They are appealing on safety grounds.

Dr Richard Vautrey, of the British Medical Associatio­n’s GP committee, said: ‘General practice is under unpreceden­ted pressure from rising workload, tightening budgets and widespread staff shortages. These findings are unsurprisi­ng.’ Norman Lamb, the Lib Dems’ former care minister, said: ‘GPs don’t want to close their lists, they are forced to do so. GP practices are badly overstretc­hed and they feel it is unsafe to have far too many patients on their lists.

‘The lack of Government funding has caused this problem and the impact on patients during a cold winter could be devastatin­g.’

Labour health spokesman Jonathan Ashworth said: ‘This shocking survey is damning evidence of a system falling apart at the seams. The Tories’ relentless underfundi­ng of primary care services has left practition­ers struggling to keep services going and it is patients paying the price.’

In September, the BMA held a ballot of GPs which found half were in favour of closing lists in protest against the Government. They said ministers had failed to provide enough funding to enable their surgeries to cope with the rising demand.

Some senior doctors within the union had wanted surgeries to close their lists in a co-ordinated form of industrial action. But BMA leaders decided against a collective move fearing it would be deeply unpopular with the public and would only harm patients.

Instead they have been lobbying the Government for more money and an increase to the GP workforce. Health Secretary Jeremy Hunt has repeatedly promised to hire an extra 5,000 GPs by 2020.

The Department of Health stressed that GPs are not allowed to close lists without approval from NHS England. A spokesman said: ‘This small survey is absolutely not representa­tive of the picture across general practice.’

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