The Guardian (USA)

The Guardian view on the NHS: this workforce plan is years late

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These are the worst of times for the NHS in England. Public satisfacti­on is at its lowest level since it started to be measured 40 years ago. Staff morale is shattered, with retention a growing problem. Currently there are more than 112,000 vacancies in a workforce of 1.26 million full-time equivalent­s. Waiting lists have reached record levels. Against this alarming backdrop – particular­ly for anyone in need of treatment – the workforce plan launched by the prime minister on Friday is welcome as well as overdue. But it should not be mistaken for a solution.

The plan, which includes a promise to spend £2.4bn over five years, is the fulfilment of a pledge made by Jeremy Hunt when he was the health secretary in 2017. The need for a strategy to train enough staff to care for an ageing population was clear then. But centralise­d workforce planning does not sit well with a Conservati­ve party that trusts markets over public administra­tors. Repeatedly, and in the face of a mounting crisis, ministers refused to act.

Mr Sunak’s government has belatedly – but rightly – recognised this as a mistake. Doubling medical school places to 15,000 per year by 2031, and increasing the number of trainee nurses by 92%, makes sense given demographi­c projection­s of the rising need for care. A commitment to rely more on staff qualified here, and less on overseas recruits, brings the UK more in line with other countries. The figure of 50% of NHS doctors employed in 2021 who were trained in other countries is too high. The recruitmen­t by highincome countries of healthcare staff from low-income ones raises ethical issues. Given existing gaps in dental care provision, a proposal to require new dentists to treat NHS patients is sound.

But while a workforce strategy was desperatel­y needed, it cannot make up for past failures. The challenge posed by ageing population­s is global. In the UK context, the record in social care policy is particular­ly poor, and there is a real risk that this plan could worsen it. In particular, the pledge to recruit 204,000 more NHS support workers will alarm care managers, as their staff may be tempted to sign up.

Pay is another hole in the policy. An upcoming five-day strike by junior doctors will further set back plans to tackle a waiting list of 7.4 million people. This week consultant­s voted to strike for the first time in 50 years. Ministers should accept the recommenda­tion of the independen­t pay review body of a 6% pay rise, with an extra £1,000 for junior doctors. If they do nothing about pay levels, warm words about retention will be revealed as just that. Consolidat­ion of an increased role for pharmacist­s is sensible, following the success of the vaccinatio­n programme which they helped roll out. Other reform proposals, including an apprentice­ship route into medicine, are more questionab­le.

Mr Sunak’s pledge is a step in the right direction – a fact which should not be lost in a public slanging match with a resigning minister. But the changing nature of illness, including growing numbers with more than one problem, or “multimorbi­dity”, is a public policy challenge that extends beyond the NHS itself. It includes the impact on people of poverty, inequality, poor housing and

unhealthy food. As the NHS reaches its 75th birthday, after 13 years of Conservati­ve

government, neither it nor the people it serves are in good health.

 ?? Photograph: Vuk Valcic/SOPA/Shuttersto­ck ?? Striking junior doctors marching in London. ‘If ministers do nothing about pay levels, warm words about retention will be revealed as just that.’
Photograph: Vuk Valcic/SOPA/Shuttersto­ck Striking junior doctors marching in London. ‘If ministers do nothing about pay levels, warm words about retention will be revealed as just that.’

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