The Daily Telegraph

How Hunt was seduced by Big Tech into giving yet more funding to the NHS

Money almost never equals efficiency in healthcare, but private investment and AI could change that

- By Ben Wright

‘It is possible to create efficienci­es, but in the public sector we’ve heard it all before’

‘The biggest barrier to greater efficiency is the NHS’S deep suspicion of the private sector’

THEY say you have to spend money to make money. But yesterday Jeremy Hunt followed a long line of chancellor­s in expressing the apparent belief that you also have to spend money to save money, especially when it comes to the National Health Service.

The former health secretary devoted a large section of his Budget speech to the NHS, announcing that the Government would be investing £3.4billion on improving “productivi­ty”. He touched on the use of artificial intelligen­ce for quicker cancer diagnosis; cutting admin to free up capacity; and transformi­ng access and services for patients.

The idea is that greater use of cutting-edge tech systems will free doctors and nurses from the drudgery of paperwork, allowing them to spend more time actually looking after patients. As an added bonus, the Chancellor estimated his plans would help save £35billion by 2030.

The trouble is, when I quote these numbers to a healthcare policy expert who hadn’t watched the Hunt’s Budget speech but has the scars on his back from wrestling with NHS bureaucrac­y for nearly two decades, his first reaction is to laugh bitterly.

Public service productivi­ty has long been the holy grail for British government­s. Gordon Brown talked of little else. With the UK’S tax burden at a record high, the national debt-to-gdp a whisker under 100 per cent and public services screaming out for more money, increased productivi­ty should, in theory at least, ensure taxpayers get more bang for their hard earned bucks.

Too often, however, it doesn’t work out like that; productivi­ty gains are elusive. Public services – and especially the gaping maw of the NHS – have a bad habit of swallowing the Government’s “investment­s” whole while failing to cough up any of the promised efficiency savings down the line. “Of course it is possible to create efficienci­es in the way the Chancellor has suggested; you only have to look at how new computer systems have revolution­ised various industries,” says Andrew Haldenby, a co-founder of think tank Reform and advisory firm Aiming for Health Success. “But, when it comes to the public sector, this is an old and favourite song; we’ve heard it all before.”

A history of failure

The list of botched IT healthcare projects is very long and far from distinguis­hed. Indeed, Hunt’s own plans as health secretary to drag the NHS kicking and screaming into the 21st century often ended in conspicuou­s failure.

As long ago as 1996, the National Audit Office launched an investigat­ion into several failing IT projects. These included the Hospital Informatio­n Support System, which was launched without a full business case appraisal; and the Read codes system, which was supposed to provide a unique 10-digit number for all patients but accidental­ly issued the same number to more than 7,500 newborn babies.

Most infamous of all was the failed national programme designed to create electronic patient records for use across the NHS in England, which had to be dismantled in 2012 at an estimated cost of £12billion. After investigat­ing the debacle as a member of the Public Accounts Committee, the Conservati­ve MP Richard Bacon said: “This saga is one of the worst and most expensive contractin­g fiascos in the history of the public sector.”

Among the firms hired to digitise patient records was Fujitsu – of recent Post Office scandal infamy. After its contract was cancelled, the Japanese company sued the government and was eventually awarded £700million in damages.

Undaunted, in 2013 the Government announced a plan to make the NHS a paperless organisati­on by 2018 in order to save billions, improve services and – stop me if you’ve heard this one before – freeing up doctors to spend more time with patients.

The Health Secretary at the time was one Jeremy Hunt. Giving evidence to a House of Lords select committee in 2017, he said: “I perhaps rather bravely said I wanted the NHS to be paperless by 2018 in my first few months as health secretary, and I am quite relieved that most people seem to have forgotten that I made that promise.”

Instead of an entirely paperless NHS, the Conservati­ves in 2018 settled for promising to ban fax machines (yes, fax machines) in the NHS by 2020. But data obtained by The Sun just last year revealed that more than 600 machines were at the time still owned by 26 English NHS trusts.

In 2019, the idea was to consign pagers to the dustbin of history. But, again, figures last year showed that 79,000 (one in 10 of the clunky communicat­ions devices still in existence globally) were still being used by the NHS. All this 14 years after the dawn of the smartphone.

Perhaps unsurprisi­ngly, productivi­ty remains a huge issue. Consequent­ly, even the Labour Party points out there’s plenty of NHS fat to trim. In January, it claimed that the £3.5 billion being spent on recruitmen­t agencies could have been used to train more staff. A further £636 million spent on management consultant­s.

Why things go wrong

Given the repeated attempts to get to grips with the NHS’S ever-rising costs, why does it remain resolutely analogue and inefficien­t? And is the Government in danger of attempting the same thing over and over again and expecting different results?

Haldenby argues the NHS isn’t really set up to focus on increasing productivi­ty. It cares about not slipping into the red and not running a deficit, but it doesn’t really focus on or care about creating more value for money. One much-needed change would be to promote greater competitio­n – the great driver of efficiency in the private sector – within the health service.

In fairness to Hunt, there are some faint signs things may be changing. According to the Treasury Red Book released to coincide with the Budget, the NHS has been running several pilot projects to test the ability of AI to automate back office functions. By getting bots to write up clinical notes, discharge summaries and GP letters, for example, doctors were able to spend more with patients.

One Department for Health and Social Care adviser says that past promises of tech-driven efficienci­es were often hot air, but AI might actually deliver change.

The NHS app is also driving greater efficienci­es. It was responsibl­e for 250million engagement­s last year including sending 60million messages to patients. This was a 40-fold increase on the year before. These app based messages are effectivel­y free and crucial to reducing the number of missed appointmen­ts. Under the old system, text messages were sent at a cost of £330million. “It’s clear that there’s an opportunit­y,” says the Whitehall adviser, but “the unanswered question is whether the NHS hierarchy is sufficient­ly brave enough to embrace the technology.”

Julian Hunt, a health services leader at PWC, argues that while the NHS does quite well at innovation, useful breakthrou­ghs are often not adopted across the entire health service. To do so will require “the right culture, leadership and behavioura­l change” across the mammoth organisati­on. Past experience does not augur well.

Different this time?

Last year, the Government attracted controvers­y when it handed the US spy tech company Palantir a £330million contract to build a new data platform. Critics said the move raised privacy concerns about patient records, though Palantir’s chief executive Alex Karp has insisted: “We’re the only company of our size and scale that doesn’t buy your data, doesn’t sell your data, doesn’t transfer it to any other company … That data belongs to the government of the United Kingdom.”

However, Palantir, named after magical crystal balls in JRR Tolkein’s Lord of the Rings, claims the so-called Federated Data Platform would “improve patient care by bringing together the informatio­n needed to plan and deliver care, and reduce the administra­tive burden on staff ”.

Last year, Karp said his company had already run a number of trial programmes to make sure operating theatres were used as efficientl­y as possible. This was an issue singled out by Hunt in his Budget speech. The Chancellor said that too often operating theatres would sit idle if a patient failed to turn up at the appointed time or a single member of staff called in sick. Part of the problem stems from the fact that the NHS uses multiple, unlinked databases. The Chancellor said Palantir’s Care Coordinati­on Solution connects different hospital IT systems so staff have access to the informatio­n they need, in one secure platform, to manage all coordinati­on needed to schedule patients into operating theatres. The Federated Data Platform is aiming to bring together healthcare data stored on separate systems to every trust in the country by the end of 2026-27 so staff can access informatio­n they need in one secure environmen­t.

Among other benefits, according to the Treasury, the NHS estimates the platform could enable a 10 per cent improvemen­t in theatre utilisatio­n, freeing up consultant­s to do an extra 200,000 operations procedures a year. If, that is, it is implemente­d successful­ly.

Private sector suspicion

If the FDP is indeed rolled out across the country, it will be a rarity. At any one time the NHS is running hundreds of tech pilot schemes in a handful of trusts. Yet however successful, willingnes­s to scale these projects up and roll them out over the whole country never seems to materialis­e.

“The biggest barrier to greater efficiency is the NHS’S deep suspicion of the private sector,” says Haldenby. “The NHS was originally conceived as a public-private partnershi­p and remains one today. But it’s still labouring under the mistaken belief that the profit motive is incompatib­le with the provision of universal healthcare.

“Why does that matter? Because all of the technologi­cal solutions that could help improve NHS efficiency are provided by the private sector.”

Might this whole debate be moot? There is, of course, the question of whether the Government will (or will be around to) deliver on its side of the bargain: the additional £3.4billion of capital funding for investment­s in technology and productivi­tyenhancin­g service improvemen­ts. “All of this investment spending is to come after the election, from 2025/26 onwards,” says Paul Johnson, the director of the IFS. “The Chancellor has promised this extra spending, but it will be for the next government to deliver (and fund).”

Polls suggest, then, that it will be a Labour government committing Hunt’s extra cash to the NHS. But when it comes to extra money and efficiency, it too has had its fingers burned.

In 2002, Tony Blair declared a record spending boost on the NHS – but most went on staff. Two years later, GPS received a pay hike of almost one quarter while allowing them to provide far less care out-of-hours. Union negotiator­s could hardly believe their luck, later admitting they thought the offer was “a bit of a laugh”.

“NHS history is littered with promises to spend more on capital and technology, budgets which have then been raided to pay for short-term pressures,” says Dr Jennifer Dixon, chief executive of the Health Foundation, “so it’s essential that this money is spent as intended.”

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