Yorkshire Post

Chancellor is accused of failing patients over £30bn funds cut

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LABOUR HAS accused the Chancellor of failing patients due to planned cuts to day-to-day spending in the Department of Health and Social Care (DHSC).

Written Budget documents revealed that there is a planned cut of £30bn in day-to-day spending from April of this year, falling from £199.2bn to £169.1bn.

NHS England will see funding fall from £147.7bn to £139.1bn from next year, unless ministers commit to more funding for the health service.

Shadow Health Secretary Jonathan Ashworth accused Rishi Sunak of failing “patients, our NHS and its staff ” in Wednesday’s Budget, as analysis by the opposition party found that waiting lists have hit a “record high”.

Research by Labour found that the number of patients waiting more than 18 weeks for treatment has increased by more than 500% over the last decade, while almost a quarter of a million people are waiting more than a year for treatment.

The party said that an estimated 4.6m people are currently on the waiting list for treatment - the highest number on record.

Mr Ashworth said: “The Chancellor is failing patients, our NHS and its staff by cutting frontline services during a pandemic.

“With lists already at a record high, this will mean patients waiting even longer in pain for vital treatment.

“Yesterday’s Budget papered over the cracks rather than rebuilding the foundation­s of our country.”

It comes after Health Secretary Matt Hancock has been warned against trying to take “excessive” powers to control the NHS in England.

Chris Hopson, the chief executive of NHS Providers representi­ng NHS trusts, said any new powers assumed by Ministers must be “very tightly defined”.

A Government White Paper published earlier this year would give the Health Secretary greater control over NHS England as part of a wide-reaching reorganisa­tion of health and social care.

It comes amid reported tensions in the early days of the coronaviru­s pandemic between ministers and senior officials at NHS England which has been operationa­lly independen­t since 2013.

 ??  ?? JONATHAN ASHWORTH: ‘This will mean patients waiting even longer in pain for vital treatment.’
JONATHAN ASHWORTH: ‘This will mean patients waiting even longer in pain for vital treatment.’

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