The next government must hit the ground running to stop election
pledges being derailed by severe NHS workforce challenges, trust
leaders warn today. These include important plans to drive down
waiting times and improve patient care.
At the start of another five-day full walkout by junior doctors
across England, bringing their total strike days to more than 40
since March 2023, trust leaders are calling for immediate
action to address the ongoing pay dispute with medics - along
with a number of other pressing workforce issues - after the
general election.
Trust leaders say the next government must make early
announcements on resolving industrial action, public sector pay
awards for this year and funding posts if the gap between
politicians' bold ambitions for health services and the
overstretched NHS workforce's ability to deliver them is to be
bridged.
Urgent in-tray issues for the new health and social care
secretary include:
- settling the long-running dispute with junior doctors
- announcing fully funded 2024/25 pay awards for NHS staff
- funding in full the NHS Long Term Workforce Plan
Healthcare leaders are bracing themselves for strike action by
junior doctors which will likely to lead to tens of thousands
more appointments and procedures being postponed for patients.
Meanwhile highly valued NHS staff on lower pay bands, from
porters and nurses to radiographers and physiotherapists, are
feeling the pinch as this year's NHS pay award - which was due in
April - continues to be delayed. Trust leaders are worried this
is chipping away at already low morale across the health service.
Nearly one year on from the publication of the first Long Term
Workforce Plan for the NHS, workforce vacancies across the NHS in
England remain stubbornly high - more than 100,000 - with surveys
showing stress, anxiety and depression as the top reasons for
staff absences in the face of heavy workloads.
Sir Hartley, chief executive, NHS
Providers, said:
“A week before the country goes to the polls, patients are likely
to see tens of thousands more appointments postponed on top of
the 1.5million operations, scans and other care hit by industrial
action across the NHS since December 2022.
“All parties have put the NHS high on the political agenda with
pledges to cut waiting times and give patients greater access to
care. None of this can be achieved, though, without a
thriving NHS workforce.
“Staff are the lifeblood of the NHS but almost a year on from
publication of the long-term workforce plan, trusts are
still grappling with staff burnout and lots of unfilled jobs.
Failure to resolve strike action by junior doctors has caused
huge disruption to patient care.
“It's vital that the next government hits the ground
running, investing in the workforce to restore
staff confidence and reset the relationship with NHS
employees. Otherwise political ambitions are at risk of being
beyond reach.”