Sunak Tells Health Leaders ‘Bold’ Approach Is Needed For NHS Fix

UK Prime Minister Rishi Sunak told a gathering of health and social-care leaders that a “bold and radical approach” is needed to end the crisis at the country’s National Health Service.

(Bloomberg) — UK Prime Minister Rishi Sunak told a gathering of health and social-care leaders that a “bold and radical approach” is needed to end the crisis at the country’s National Health Service.

Sunak hosted a “recovery forum” of health professionals and officials at Downing Street on Saturday that was first announced last night to address issues including improving emergency treatment and speeding up social-care discharge. The government said it would publish plans to improve ambulance and A&E waiting times in the coming weeks. 

“We are determined to ease pressure on the NHS, ensure better care for patients and deliver our promise to cut waiting lists,” Sunak commented in a tweet Saturday. 

Members of Sunak’s own party have criticized the government’s response to the latest pressures on the NHS. Staff shortages, labor unrest and the fallout from the Covid-19 pandemic and winter flu have led some hospitals to declare critical incidents. Seriously ill patients are facing long waits for emergency care and there has also been a steep rise in excess deaths at home and in hospitals. 

Nurses and ambulance workers are slated to take further industrial action this month, while a union representing junior doctors said Friday it would hold a 72-hour strike in March if members embrace it in a ballot starting next week. Talks between ministers and unions across different industries are expected to resume Monday. 

The Royal College of Nursing — which has been seeking a 19% increase in wages — wants the UK government to meet it “halfway” on pay, the union’s chief said earlier this week. 

In the meantime, the government will be looking for more ways to demonstrate they have a long-term strategy for the health system. Ministers are considering plans in the coming weeks to increase the number of carers and medical training places, and to make doctor-degree apprenticeships more flexible, Bloomberg reported. 

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