Articles

Bringing you the latest independent views on health and social care from The King's Fund, all of our reports and findings from our projects are available to buy or download.

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GPs must adapt to a new model of care

Constructive dialogue between GPs as providers and commissioners, and all other providers of care must be the way forward, says Chris Ham.

Supporting hospital staff to provide compassionate care: do Schwartz Center Rounds® work in English hospitals?

Joanna Goodrich, Ros Levenson
Based on interviews and surveys with patients, this report looks at whether the Schwartz Center Rounds could transfer from the US to a UK setting.

What will the Health and Social Care Bill mean for the NHS in England?

Implementation will be as important as legislation in determining the impact of the Health and Social Care Bill, says Chris Ham.

Hospitals: what do they do and how much does it cost?

The question is not (and never has been) whether hospitals are needed but, rather, what types of hospital, how big, where located, doing what to whom, and how often?

Redesigning wards to support people with dementia in hospital

Sarah Waller describes how The King's Fund's EHE programme is bringing staff and patients together to create more inspiring and therapeutic environments.

Patient choice should not force commissioners away from competition

A health care market where competition is heavily regulated threatens to restrict commissioners in their goal to secure quality, value for money services.

The other health story

As opponents of the Health and Social Care Bill force delays to its timetable, Anna Dixon analyses some of the issues on the ground that should concern the public.

Taking up the Dorrell challenge

There remains a worry that the government's efficiency drive is still focused on short-term savings that may not ultimately deliver the benefits to patients it claims.

John Appleby on risking failure

John Appleby looks at what role trial and error will play in the new NHS in light of Tim Harford's book, Adapt.

The NHS bill is wrong to target managers for cuts

Chris Ham argues that the health service must retain experienced leaders able to work with doctors, nurses and other clinicians to provide the best possible care.

Why medical leaders need to be proactive in driving culture change

Vijaya Nath and John Clark discuss the importance of doctors taking on leadership if improvements in access, quality, safety and productivity are to be realised.

The management of the NHS in England

Impassioned discussion about competition and new providers of care may make debate about managers unfashionable, but they are essential in a well run health service.

Four things you never knew about social care

Richard Humphries discusses four things you may not know about England's social care system in his article for Age UK.

English NHS hospital activity: doing less (with less or the same)?

John Appleby examines the numbers behind recent claims about activity in English hospitals.

A better dementia care environment

Sarah Waller looks at past and current work to improve the care environment for people living with dementia.

Reshaping commissioning

With authorisation starting in October 2012, Chris Naylor asks how ready are the CCGs to take over the mantle of primary care commissioning.

Championing health and wellbeing

Among the many hotly debated measures set out in the Health and Social Care Act one initiative remains uncontroversial: health and wellbeing boards.

A whole system approach to clinical commissioning

GPs in Hertfordshire
We talked to some GPs about the challenges of leading change and our whole systems approach to help with clinical commissioning.

Macmillan Cancer Support: preparing for change

Judy Taylor, Juliet Bouverie
We hear from Macmillan Cancer Support leaders and managers about the benefits of their commissioned programme from The King's Fund.

NHS overhaul would face slow burn

Nicholas Timmins suggests that the evidence to date is that if there is going to be a revolution in the private provision of NHS care, it is going to be a slow one.

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