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Prime Minister pledges that new NHS 10-year-plan marks start of ‘major renewal of Britain'

Prime Minister pledges that new NHS 10-year-plan marks start of ‘major renewal of Britain'

ITV News2 days ago
A new 10-year-plan will "fundamentally rewire and future proof our NHS", according to the prime minister as he prepares to unveil his vision for the health service in an upcoming major speech.
The plan, which will be published on Thursday morning, will focus on 'three big shifts' in the way the health service operates, Sir Keir is expected to say.
The 'status quo of hospital by default will end,' according to the Government, with care shifted into neighbourhoods and people's homes.
By 2035, the intention is that the majority of outpatient care will occur outside of hospitals, with less need for hospital-based appointments for things like eye care, cardiology, respiratory medicine and mental health.
New neighbourhood health services will bring testing, post operation care, nursing and mental health teams closer to people's homes.
The aim is to give people access to a full range of services, leaving hospitals to focus on the sickest patients, with neighbourhood health centres opening at evenings and weekends.
New services are also set to include debt advice, employment support and stop smoking or obesity services – all of which affect people's health.
The government added that community outreach, with people going door to door, could also reduce pressure on GPs and A&E.
Ahead of the speech, Sir Keir said it was time for the health service to 'reform or die'.
'Our 10-year health plan will fundamentally rewire and future-proof our NHS so that it puts care on people's doorsteps, harnesses game-changing tech and prevents illness in the first place,' he added.
Health Secretary Wes Streeting said the plan would deliver 'one of the most fundamental changes in the way we receive our healthcare in history'.
Royal College of Nursing (RCN) general secretary, Professor Nicola Ranger urged the Prime Minister to 'back up his plan with a clear one to turn around the shortage of nurses in all local communities.
'Moving care away from overcrowded hospitals is urgent and necessary but it will prove impossible whilst this part of the healthcare workforce is so depleted and undervalued,' she added.
The Government's political opponents were sceptical about the plan, with Conservative shadow health secretary Edward Argar insisting that it must provide reform and 'that reform must be real, it needs to be deliverable, and crucially it must deliver results for patients'.
Liberal Democrat Leader Sir Ed Davey said the plan 'will be a castle built on sand until ministers finally tackle the crisis in social care'.
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