Skip to main content
Home The King's Fund

Main navigation

  • Topics
    • Health and care services
      • Adult social care
      • Community services
      • Emergency care
      • General practice
      • Hospital care
      • Long-term conditions
      • Maternity services
      • Mental health
      • New models of care
      • Public health
      • Sexual health care
    • Leadership, systems and organisations
      • Clinical leadership
      • Covid-19
      • Equality and diversity
      • Integrated care
      • Organisational culture
      • Quality improvement
      • Sustainability and transformation plans
      • System leadership
      • Voluntary and community sector
      • Workforce and skills
    • Patients, people and society
      • Carers
      • Children and young people
      • Health inequalities
      • Housing
      • Older people
      • Patient experience
      • Patient involvement
      • Patient safety
      • Population health
      • Public opinion
      • Technology and data
      • Volunteers
    • Policy, finance and performance
      • Access to care
      • Brexit
      • Commissioning and contracting
      • General election 2019
      • Governance and regulation
      • NHS finances
      • NHS five year forward view
      • NHS long-term plan
      • Performance
      • Productivity
      • Social care finances
  • Publications
  • Blog
  • Health and care explained
  • Events
  • Courses
  • Consultancy and support
    • Organisational development
    • Policy and advisory services
    • Library services
  • About us
Newsletter sign up
Newsletter sign up

Blog

Comment and analysis on the key issues in health and social care

Listing Content Type

  • All blogs
Share this content
  • Share on Twitter
  • Share on Facebook
  • Share on LinkedIn
  • Share on Email
  • Print this page
  • Health and care services
    • (-) Adult social care
    • Community services
    • Emergency care
    • General practice
    • Hospital care
    • Long-term conditions
    • Mental health
    • New models of care
    • Public health
  • Leadership, systems and organisations
    • Clinical commissioning groups
    • Clinical leadership
    • Equality and diversity
    • Health and wellbeing boards
    • Integrated care
    • Local service design
    • System leadership
    • Voluntary and community sector
    • Workforce and skills
  • Patients, people and society
    • Health inequalities
    • Older people
    • Patient experience
    • Patient involvement
    • Patient safety
    • Technology and data
    • Volunteers
  • Policy, finance and performance
    • (-) Better Care Fund
    • Commissioning and contracting
    • Governance and regulation
    • Health and Social Care Act 2012
    • (-) NHS finances
    • (-) Performance
    • Productivity
    • (-) Social care finances
  • 2008
  • 2009
  • 2010
  • 2011
  • 2012
  • (-) 2013
  • 2014
  • 2015
  • 2016
  • 2017
  • 2018
  • 2019
  • 2020
  • 2021
Blog

New CCG allocations: straw men laid to rest but deeper questions remain?

NHS England have set out their thinking on how the bulk of NHS money will get to where it needs to be, and on what basis, through allocations to CCGs – David Buck shares his thoughts on this decision.
Thumbnail
By David Buck - 17 December 2013
Blog

After the hard truths, the hard actions

Whichever way you look at it, responding to Francis and the associated reports was going to be a challenging balancing act for the government.
Thumbnail
By Catherine Foot - 22 November 2013
Blog

The Integration Transformation Fund: the foundation of a genuinely integrated system or just another brick in the wall?

Expectations for the Integrated Transformation Fund are high, but will it actually help to deliver integrated care when the system is so under pressure?
Thumbnail
By Richard Humphries - 31 October 2013
Blog

What are we spending on the English NHS?

Although politicians say the NHS has been protected financially, this is only relative to real cuts in other areas of government and, crucially, not in terms of the demands on health care, says John Appleby.
Thumbnail
By John Appleby - 22 October 2013
Blog

Why aren’t care homes higher on the agenda in the health debate?

So much of our effort is spent trying to extend life that our ageing society should be a success story, a cause for celebration. Why then aren’t care homes firmly on the agenda in political debates on the NHS?
Thumbnail
By Duncan Hockey - 9 October 2013
Blog

What are the real costs of falls and fractures?

David Oliver looks at the direct and indirect costs associated with falls and fractures, and how we can disentangle these from the costs of the multiple morbidities people who fall often live with.
Thumbnail
By David Oliver - 4 September 2013
Blog

The NHS workforce: how do we balance cost-effectiveness with safety?

Professor James Buchan explores how NHS reforms have affected the health and social care workforce, and the importance of maintaining the balance between safety and cost-effectiveness.
Thumbnail
By James Buchan - 3 September 2013
Blog

Future payment systems in the NHS

The more we have got to know about how Payment by Results and similar payment methods in other countries operate in practice, the more there seems to be a case for a rethink.
Thumbnail
By John Appleby - 29 August 2013
Blog

Ageing: opportunity or challenge?

To secure the opportunities of the ‘gift of longer life’ we have to think differently about how we organise and fund our health and care services for an ageing population.
Thumbnail
By Richard Humphries - 14 August 2013
Blog

Is it worth tinkering with an emergency care payment system in need of a thorough overhaul?

With the current state of the payment system for emergency care making evaluation difficult and evidence hard to interpret, is it time for an overhaul?
Thumbnail
By Loraine Hawkins - 30 July 2013
Blog

The Keogh Review: a welcome return to 2008

As the NHS now enters its 66th year, how far have we got towards Darzi's vision of clinical and organisational leaders collecting data on quality and using it to continuously improve care?
Thumbnail
By Catherine Foot - 17 July 2013
Blog

What happened to the extra NHS billions?

Three years ago the coalition government's first Spending Review promised to ring fence the budget for the English NHS and to increase spending in real terms each year to 2014/15. So what has actually happened to NHS spending?
Thumbnail
By John Appleby - 27 June 2013
Blog

Show us your data, doctors

Ninety-two doctors have been in the news recently over their decision to opt out of the government's plan to publish outcomes data for named consultants. But is publishing outcomes like this the right thing to do?
Thumbnail
By Catherine Foot - 20 June 2013
Blog

What next for health and social care in England?

Chris Ham introduces our Commission on the future of health and social care in England, explaining that the divison between the NHS and social care established in 1948 is no longer fit for purpose.
Thumbnail
By Professor Sir Chris Ham - 18 June 2013
Blog

Managing expectations in health services: over-promising and under-delivering?

In his latest blog post, David Oliver argues that new NHS initiatives should be tested for a longer period of time in order to deliver better outcomes across the board.
Thumbnail
By David Oliver - 14 June 2013
Blog

Beyond Dilnot: the need for wider reform

The new Care Bill is a breakthrough for social care funding, as for the first time, there will be a limit on how much people have to pay for their care. But there are still dangers in the proposed system.
Thumbnail
By Richard Humphries - 21 May 2013
Blog

The NHS failure regime: what have we learnt so far?

Candace Imison explores what we can learn from early experiments in using a failure regime in the NHS.
Thumbnail
By Candace Imison - 2 May 2013
Blog

Are accident and emergency attendances increasing?

Pressures on accident and emergency departments have hit the headlines recently. But what are the facts about A&E attendances?
Thumbnail
By John Appleby, James Thompson - 29 April 2013
Blog

Can we keep up with the demand for urgent and emergency care?

With the urgent and emergency care system under severe pressure, Nigel Edwards looks at how the problems around increasing demand could be addressed.
Thumbnail
By Nigel Edwards - 24 April 2013
Blog

Politics and satisfaction with the NHS

Are the public's views about the NHS, in particular their satisfaction with the NHS, shaped, influenced or, in some way, linked to support for or identification with political parties?
Thumbnail
By John Appleby - 3 April 2013
Viewing 1 - 20 of 26

Pagination

  • Previous page
  • Current page 1
  • Page 2
  • Next page

Subscribe to our Weekly Update newsletter

Publications: Independent research and analysis on health and social care

Reports, long reads and articles.

Quick links

  • About us
  • Contact us
  • Corporate partners
  • Job vacancies
  • Multimedia
  • Press centre
  • Projects
  • Who's who

Connect with us

  • Twitter
  • LinkedIn
  • Facebook
  • Youtube

Latest Tweet

Weekly Update newsletter

Subscribe for a weekly round-up of our latest news and content

Footer

  • Privacy notice and cookies
  • Accessibility
  • Terms and conditions
  • Comments policy
  • Copyright
© The King's Fund 2021 Registered charity: 1126980