IFG - The government's NHS crisis response is likely too little and too late for this winter.

27 Jan 2023 09:22 AM

The government’s emergency measures to support the NHS will likely be too little and too late to solve this winter’s crisis, warns a new Institute for Government paper.

Published yesterday, NHS crisis: Does the government have a plan?, evaluates the government’s claims for why the NHS crisis is happening and assesses the likely effectiveness of its response – including measures set out in Rishi Sunak’s 4 January speech in which he promised that “waiting lists will fall and people will get the care they need more quickly”. 

In response to pledges set out by the prime minister, the paper finds that:

The new IfG paper finds that Sunak was ambiguous enough in the wording of his speech – for example the prime minister referred to both “waiting times” and “waiting lists” - that he will be able to point to almost any improvement, anywhere in the service, at any point between now and the election, as a promise kept. However, “people’s experience of the health service is often deeply personal and many will base their judgments on a much narrower set of performance indicators than the prime minister’s.”

The paper also warns that the crisis will be repeated next winter if the government does not take immediate steps to improve performance in the NHS by addressing the crisis’s underlying causes of poor staff retention, underinvestment in capital, a lack of effective management, inadequate community and social care provision, and a poorly resourced primary care service.