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Health and social care funding to 2024/25.

by Rocks, Stephen; Boccarini, Giulia; Charlesworth, Anita; Idriss, Omar; McConkey, Ruth; Rachet-Jacquet, Laurie.Health Foundation. REAL Centre.
Publisher: Health Foundation, London : 2021.Description: 31p.Summary: This analysis sets out the scale of the challenge facing government if it wants to clear the backlog in NHS care over the course of this parliament and return hospital waiting times to 18 weeks. It estimates it will cost up to £16.8bn over the remainder of this parliament (up to 2024/25) to enable the NHS to clear the backlog of people waiting for routine elective care, return to 18 weeks, and treat millions of ‘missing’ patients who were expected to receive care during the pandemic but did not. In all, this would allow an additional 2.2million extra patients to be seen a year. This slide deck provide a summary of key findings from the report which will be published later in September..Subject(s): England | patient waiting time | access to health services | costs | targets | financing | statistical data | evaluation | Covid-19 | pandemics
Digital copyAvailability: Online access | Online access Note: ; Health Foundation publications. List(s) this item appears in: Covid-19: health and social care recovery in England [January 2023]
Holdings
Item type Current library Collection Call number Status Date due Barcode
Web publication The King's Fund Library Online resource Web publications and sites Web publications (Browse shelf(Opens below)) Not for loan

This analysis sets out the scale of the challenge facing government if it wants to clear the backlog in NHS care over the course of this parliament and return hospital waiting times to 18 weeks. It estimates it will cost up to £16.8bn over the remainder of this parliament (up to 2024/25) to enable the NHS to clear the backlog of people waiting for routine elective care, return to 18 weeks, and treat millions of ‘missing’ patients who were expected to receive care during the pandemic but did not. In all, this would allow an additional 2.2million extra patients to be seen a year. This slide deck provide a summary of key findings from the report which will be published later in September.

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