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Pressures in UK Healthcare: Challenges for the NHS

Pressures in UK Healthcare: Challenges for the NHS. Carl Emmerson Chris Frayne Alissa Goodman. “We will rebuild the NHS” “We will raise spending on the NHS in real terms every year and put the money towards patient care.” Labour Party manifesto 1997. Health spending.

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Pressures in UK Healthcare: Challenges for the NHS

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  1. Pressures in UK Healthcare:Challenges for the NHS Carl Emmerson Chris Frayne Alissa Goodman

  2. “We will rebuild the NHS” “We will raise spending on the NHS in real terms every year and put the money towards patient care.” Labour Party manifesto 1997 Health spending

  3. NHS spending since 1979 Real increases in spending, 1979 to 2004

  4. “The Government will rebuild the NHS and improve the delivery of social services by: ... increasing NHS funding by an average of 4.7 per cent a year, above inflation, for three years…” Comprehensive Spending Review, July 1998 Increases in NHS spending

  5. NHS spending since 1979 Real increases in spending, 1979 to 2004

  6. NHS spending since 1979 Real increases in spending, 1979 to 2004

  7. In the March 2000 budget, the Chancellor, Gordon Brown announced: “by far the largest sustained increase in NHS funding of any period in its 50-year history” Budget speech, 21st March 2000 Further increases in NHS spending

  8. NHS spending since 1979 Real increases in spending, 1979 to 2004

  9. NHS spending since 1979 Real increases in spending, 1979 to 2004

  10. NHS spending since 1979 Real increases in spending, 1979 to 2004

  11. NHS spending Real increases in spending, various periods

  12. NHS spending Real increases in spending, various periods

  13. NHS spending 1949 - 2004 NHS spending as a share of GDP

  14. Where does NHS money go? • Hospital and Community Health Services • Family Health Services • Central Health and Miscellaneous Services • Departmental Administration

  15. Hospital and Community Spending

  16. Hospital and Community Spending

  17. Pressures in UK Healthcare:Challenges for the NHS In the second part of the presentation, we ask what the important issues facing the National Health Service are now and what they will be in the future.

  18. Economic justifications • Equity arguments • Efficiency arguments • Social returns to health • Lack of consumer information • Problems with insurance markets • What type of intervention does this justify?

  19. International comparisons • NHS one form of government intervention • Healthcare models vary • Social insurance models in France and Germany • Greater reliance on the private sector in Switzerland and the US • Countries also differ in terms of actual spending and on health outcomes

  20. Total health spending in G7 countries Source: OECD Health Data

  21. Size of the private sector Source: OECD Health Data

  22. Measuring health outputs Source: OECD Health Data

  23. Measuring health outputs Source: OECD Health Data

  24. Measuring health outputs Source: OECD Health Data

  25. Measuring health outputs Source: OECD Health Data

  26. Cancer survival rates Five year survival rates Source: Coleman (1999)

  27. Other measures of NHS quality: inpatient waiting lists Source: House of Commons Library / Department of Health

  28. Indicators of quality: inpatient waiting lists Source: House of Commons Library / Department of Health

  29. Why do we care about waiting lists? • Whenever there is demand for a scarce good it will be rationed • Waiting reduces benefits of treatment • Increases use of private sector • For certain ailments some individuals may decide not to get treated at all • Waiting times

  30. Indicators of quality: waiting times Source: House of Commons Health Select Committee

  31. Indicators of regional variation: per cent of population on a waiting list England Source: NHS Executive (1999)

  32. Indicators of regional variation: per cent of population on a waiting list England Source: NHS Executive (1999)

  33. Indicators of regional variation:Inefficient use of inputs? Source: Regional Trends, 1999

  34. Variation within and between regions Highest and lowest rates of death after non-emergency admission Source: NHS Executive (1999)

  35. Variation within and between regions Highest and lowest rates of death after non-emergency admission Source: NHS Executive (1999)

  36. Indicators of regional variation:The impact of performance targets per cent women seeing a specialist within 2 weeks of suspected breast cancer Source: Department of Health

  37. Potential indicator of NHS quality: private medical insurance Source: Office of Health Economics / Laing and Buisson (1999)

  38. Private health spending Private spending as a share of total health spending Source: OECD Health data

  39. Private health spending in the NHS NHS private income, in real terms, per cent of 1952 levels Source: Office of Health Economics

  40. Coverage of private medical insurance Percentage covered by income decile Average = 12.5 per cent Source: Family Resources Survey, 1994-95 to 1997-98

  41. Coverage of private medical insurance Percentage covered by income decile Average = 12.5 per cent Source: Family Resources Survey, 1994-95 to 1997-98

  42. Coverage of private medical insurance Percentage covered by income decile Source: Family Resources Survey, 1994-95 to 1997-98

  43. Employment Status Employees more likely to be covered than self employed or those not in work Housing tenure Owner-occupiers Occupation Managers, technical staff and professionals Region London, South East and West Midlands Who has private medical insurance? Characteristics of those more likely to be covered: • Age and gender • 40 to 60 year olds • Males • Family situation • Couples and households without children • Income and savings • Higher income and higher levels of savings • Education • Those with higher levels of qualifications • Those still ineducation

  44. A subsidy for private medical insurance? • Subsidy existed for over 60s prior to July 1997 • Reduces burden on NHS spending • But subsidy itself would add to public spending • Could a subsidy be self-financing? • Depends on how many additional people take out PMI • Extremely unlikely to pay for itself

  45. Policy issues • Support for the National Health Service • Those with PMI less likely to support NHS spending increases • Support among those with PMI still relatively high • Freeing up of public spending • Presence of PMI benefits the NHS • Potential effect of improvements in NHS quality

  46. An ageing population Source: Annual Abstract of Statistics / Government Actuary’s Department

  47. An ageing population Source: Annual Abstract of Statistics / Government Actuary’s Department

  48. NHS expenditure, by age Source: Department of Health

  49. Pressure on the NHS from anageing population: Baseline forecasts

  50. What is the actual effect of ageing? • Health spending could relate to lifetime remaining rather than calendar age • Evidence from Scotland (Hanlon et al, 1998), Switzerland (Zweifel et al,1999) and the US (Cutler and Meara, 1999) • Demographics still matter • Timing of expenditure • Impact of changing birth rates

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