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Blog

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

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  • Health and care services
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Blog

A transformation fund for the NHS

Over the coming months The King’s Fund and The Health Foundation will be exploring the concept of a transformation fund. How big does such a fund need to be? And how should it be spent so that it supports real change at scale across the NHS?
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By Lillie Wenzel - 18 December 2014
Blog

What does the Autumn Statement mean for health and social care?

As the dust settles on the Chancellor's Autumn Statement, this is a good time to review what it told us. I think it contained three big messages: one on money, one on reform, and one on social care.
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By Richard Murray - 11 December 2014
Blog

Supporting community providers to manage and improve quality

Community services are a vital part of delivering co-ordinated care, and could be the answer to many of the health service’s woes in the future, says Bev Fitzsimons.
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By Bev Fitzsimons - 4 December 2014
Blog

The Better Care Fund: will the plans work?

The government expects councils and NHS partners to achieve way too much, with too little, too soon, says Richard Humphries.
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By Richard Humphries - 5 November 2014
Blog

Hospital workload in one chart: good news, bad news

With hospital workloads increasing on all fronts, John Appleby takes a look at the key trends and data to explain what's going on.
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By John Appleby - 30 October 2014
Blog

NHS funding: past and future

The NHS featured heavily at all three major party conferences over the past few weeks. How could it not; despite a ring-fenced budget, it is increasingly showing signs of financial strain, says John Appleby.
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By John Appleby - 7 October 2014
Blog

Delivering better value in the NHS

2014/15 looks like being a watershed year in which the NHS moves decisively into deficit, so where do the opportunities lie in delivering better value?
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By Professor Sir Chris Ham - 3 October 2014
Blog

The deafening silence on the funding of health and care must be challenged

The deafening silence on future funding amounts to a failure of the political process at a time when the NHS is heading rapidly towards a deep and damaging crisis.
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By Professor Sir Chris Ham - 16 September 2014
Blog

Taxing retired households to pay for care

The third in a series of guest blogs that we are publishing in the run-up to the launch of the final report from the Commission on the Future of Health and Social Care in England. Each focuses on one of the possible options for funding future health and social care. Here, Andrew Harrop of the Fabian Society argues that retired households should contribute more towards the costs of health and care.
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By Andrew Harrop - 27 August 2014
Blog

Can we ignore NHS charges any longer?

The second in a series of guest blogs that we are publishing in the run-up to the launch of the final report from the Commission on the Future of Health and Social Care in England. Each focuses on one of the possible options for funding future health and social care. Here, Andrew Haldenby and Cathy Corrie of Reform discuss why new NHS charges are necessary and why no political party wants to talk about them.
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By Andrew Haldenby, Cathy Corrie - 20 August 2014
Blog

An NHS tax is needed to keep the NHS free to all at the point of need

The first in a series of guest blogs in the run-up to the launch of the final report from the Commission on the Future of Health and Social Care in England. Each focuses on one of the possible options for funding future health and social care. Here, Nick Pearce of IPPR discusses how a dedicated NHS tax might work.
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By Nick Pearce - 13 August 2014
Blog

What happens when the money runs out?

If in 2013/14 the NHS struggled to maintain performance even with a recruitment round, the chances it can continue to do so with fewer, rather than more, staff look non-existent, says Richard Murray.
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By Richard Murray - 22 July 2014
Blog

Better Care Fund, better read the small print?

Although earlier rumours of the demise of the Better Care Fund – the government’s £3.8 billion pooled fund to promote integrated care – have turned out to be greatly exaggerated, the significance of the government’s latest announcement about the fund should not be.
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By Richard Humphries - 8 July 2014
Blog

Wanted: an even Better Care Fund

In light of our new report on the NHS productivity challenge, Chris Ham calls for a new transformation fund to stop the NHS approaching a major financial crisis.
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By Professor Sir Chris Ham - 1 May 2014
Blog

We can learn more from India than how to cut costs

Here’s a puzzle for you. You have a population of one million people, three psychiatrists, and no mental health nurses. How do you go about delivering mental health care?
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By Chris Naylor - 24 April 2014
Blog

The NHS: running out of money

The last time the NHS fell into deficit it came to many as something of a surprise. This time – going by the responses in our latest quarterly monitoring report – it’s looking rather predictable.
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By Richard Murray - 15 April 2014
Blog

Don’t duck the hard choices spelt out by the Barker Commission

The post-war settlement that created the current divide between health and social care must be replaced. If we duck the hard choices laid out by the Barker commission, then services will progressively deteriorate with patients, users and carers the real losers.
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By Professor Sir Chris Ham - 9 April 2014
Blog

It is time for a new settlement for health and social care in England

Kate Barker, Chair of the Commission on the Future of Health and Social Care in England, introduces the key findings of the commission's interim report and calls for further evidence to consider the funding options.
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By Kate Barker - 3 April 2014
Blog

Can Simon Stevens build a coalition for change?

Simon Stevens takes up his post as Chief Executive of NHS England today, with an inbox that will be full to overflowing. But what are the three issues that demand his immediate attention?
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By Professor Sir Chris Ham - 1 April 2014
Blog

What can we learn from how other countries fund health and social care?

How do other countries respond to the challenges of funding health and care for an ageing population? Sarah Gregory takes a closer look in her latest blog.
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By Sarah Gregory - 26 March 2014
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