Politicos expect government budgets to contain a few surprises, and Philip Hammondโs Spring Budget was no exception. Despite beliefs social care would be the only beneficiary of additional government funding, the Chancellor produced an announcement on NHS funding, concentrated around supporting Sustainability and Transformation Plans (STPs). The announcement has three prongs to it, all relating to capital investment, ย and itโs worth interrogating each of these in turn.
Before going into the funding allocations, itโs worth explaining that capital investment funds healthcare infrastructure, including new buildings for healthcare to be in and technology to support the delivery of care. The Department of Health has an annual capital allocation of ยฃ4.8 billion for each financial year between 2016/17 and 2020/21, with the intention that this is invested in new medical premises, digitising patient records, etc. This funding is needed to keep up to date with modern ways of working in the NHS, and to ensure doctors and patients are housed in safe, contemporary facilities.
However, the well-documented financial struggles of the NHS have resulted in portions of this ยฃ4.8 billion being shifted to other areas of the NHS (the revenue budget): ยฃ950 million was moved during 2015/16, ยฃ1.2 billion was moved during this financial year, and further transfers are anticipated of ยฃ1 billion in 2017/18, ยฃ500 million in 2018/19 and ยฃ250 million in 2019/20. The Public Accounts Committeeโs recent report on the financial sustainability of the NHS strongly criticised this and branded it a risk to the NHSโs future performance.
Each Sustainability and Transformation Plan (STP) footprint across England has estimated how much capital they will require to successfully deliver their ambitions, and the BMA thinks it comes to an eye-watering ยฃ9.5 billion. Numerous STPs have warned that uncertainty around capital investment could jeopardise plans, as theyโll be unable to forecast how reformed services will deliver new models of care closer to the community. Given DHโs recognition that capital raids are likely to continue over the coming years, healthcare leaders are understandably concerned that the STP process could be thrown off course if the numbers around capital investment donโt start to add up soon.
So, will the Budget announcement alleviate concerns? The Chancellor has announced three components of capital funding to support STPs. Firstly, ยฃ325 million of capital funding will be allocated to STPs over the next three years โwhere there is the strongest case to deliver real improvements for patients and to ensure a sustainable financial position for the health service.โ Second, an extra ยฃ100 million will go straight to A&E departments to fund new ways to assess patients when they arrive at department, to understand whether they should be treated there or somewhere else, potentially at an on-site GP surgery. And a multi-year capital expenditure programme will be announced in the autumn, which will be subject to โrigorous value for money testsโ.
The Shadow Health Secretary Jonathan Ashworth pointed out that this capital funding is nowhere near what is estimated as needed to deliver STPs. It is right that it is a drop in the ocean compared with the level of investment the whole NHS needs, but the Governmentโs logic is sound. To date the STP process has been rushed, and if reforms are to be meaningful and effective they need to be thought through. In this fiscal climate, projects must demonstrate value for investment.
What matters now is how the Government classifies a โwell-developed STPโ with a โstrong caseโ for delivering service improvements. The terminology around this has been vague, and there will be an expectation on DH and NHSE to produce a quantifiable evaluation. It would be wise for NHS Englandโs Five Year Forward View delivery plan โ due to be published at the end of March โ to address how โstrongโ STPs will be chosen to receive this funding. Critically though, this shouldnโt be entirely dependent on a footprintโs financial performance, as has been suggested before: penalising a footprint for its financial difficulties, by refusing to award them funding to improve services, is illogical.