The Sunday Telegraph

Technology and reform: the NHS needs both

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Despite vast increases in funding and staffing, the NHS, an increasing­ly unmanageab­le behemoth, is in meltdown – its A&E services overwhelme­d and productivi­ty collapsing. The Government will unveil a package of reforms tomorrow in an attempt at steadying the ship; one of its more striking ideas is to drasticall­y expand so-called “virtual wards” to allow tens of thousands more elderly and vulnerable people to be treated at home. While some may balk at the idea of video links and monitors replacing stays in hospitals, harnessing technology in this way is actually a good idea, if it’s handled carefully.

Heart attack ambulance waiting times reached an average 93 minutes in December, and the hospital crowding crisis is made worse by patients who are medically well being stuck on wards for lack of care at home. Moreover, hospitals have become notoriousl­y uncomforta­ble and unhealthy to stay in, even dangerous, and no doubt many patients would welcome the option to recover at home. That’s on the proviso that they are genuinely well-monitored and that ancillary services, such as the district nurse, are properly available. When GP surgeries shifted to remote consultati­ons during lockdown, it was sold as being in the patient’s interest, and can often be – but many readers said they could no longer get physical appointmen­ts at all. Virtual wards must not be used to take the heat off hospital management rather than providing choice based upon a patient’s genuine need.

Likewise, doing more work outside of hospitals cannot distract from the serious problems that exist within them. This ranges from asbestos to absurd levels of paperwork. Then there is neglect – as indicated in the recent case of Wynter Andrews, a baby who died after just 23 minutes of being born at Nottingham University Hospitals. The trust was fined £800,000 after admitting failings in care.

The NHS needs both technologi­cal innovation and structural reform; it’s not an either/or. There should be an epoch-defining, bipartisan discussion – preferably in the form of a Royal Commission, as called for by Lord Saatchi in these pages today – that looks objectivel­y at what other countries do and what we could learn. Nations with hybrid systems of public and private provision enjoy better health outcomes. So long as we stick with our present model, rationing will be inevitable – and will likely take the form of some kind of waiting list, be it for a bed or a home visit.

The Tories have long been terrified of appearing to tamper with the Nye Bevan vision of the NHS, but the longer they dodge the fundamenta­l issue, the more territory there is for Labour to occupy. Ministers should follow the logic of this sensible reform and go further.

Strikes will harm children

There is no point being mealy-mouthed about it: teaching strikes due to take place this week are morally unconscion­able.

The greatest price will be paid by children who were already forced to sacrifice so much of their education during lockdown – suffering loss of learning, socialisat­ion, future earnings and damage to their mental health. Unions during that period were notoriousl­y reluctant to go back to work.

Now staff are walking out over pay, led by the National Education Union – a far-Left organisati­on hellbent on “decolonisi­ng the curriculum” and keeping alive the flame of Corbynism (several members of its national executive signed a statement blaming Nato for the Russian invasion of Ukraine).

The NEU has failed to let headmaster­s know exactly how many of its members are walking out, which will guarantee chaos this week and shut down much of the economy. As with the RMT, their action increasing­ly looks political, aimed at humiliatin­g the Tories rather than improving schooling. Their demand for inflation-busting pay increases would leave private employees behind in the dust – and comes on top of the Government already agreeing to pump substantia­l resources into education.

The Tories are being too reactive. They understand­ably want to seem reasonable when handling groups of publicsect­or workers, which voters instinctiv­ely respect. But their old-fashioned decency is only being manipulate­d by cynical militants.

The Government needs to mount a PR campaign of its own to illustrate why it has a responsibi­lity to stand firm. Strikers are treating parents and children like political pawns.

Mind that satellite!

Astronomer­s warn that the night sky will be “crawling” with satellites by the end of the decade, making stargazing about as pleasant as a motorway picnic. There are already more than 8,000 up there – a four-fold increase since 2019 – and around 400,000 more have been approved.

Ufologists complain that with so many TV transmitte­rs and internet beamers snaking around the planet, it’ll be hard to find a crack to gaze through to spot life on other planets. It might also reduce the likelihood of a flying saucer dropping in on us.

“Should we say hello?” asks the Martian driver to his tentacled passenger, as a million satellites crawl slowly past the windscreen.

“Not now, honey. It looks like the rush hour.”

 ?? ?? ESTABLISHE­D 1961
ESTABLISHE­D 1961

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