Therese Coffey pledges £500m war chest to tackle NHS bed-blocking scandal 

Therese Coffey has vowed to combat the NHS bed-blocking crisis with the launch of a £500million emergency fund.

The Health and Social Care Secretary told MPs the money will help free up space in hospitals as she revealed her own nine-hour wait in A&E.

Beleaguered ambulance services will also be supported by a new army of volunteer first aiders in a bid to cut delays. More than 13,000 beds in England – around one in seven – are occupied by patients who have been deemed medically fit to leave.

But a shortage of carers means they face difficulty finding a place in care or home help. Care providers will be encouraged to use the fund to help plug 165,000 vacancies.

Staff may be offered bonuses, pay rises or more generous overtime to prevent more leaving for better paid jobs in retail. There will also be a drive to attract more care workers from abroad, with £15million available to cover areas like visa applications and accommodation.

Miss Coffey described the £500million as a ‘downpayment’ while ministers work to rebalance funding across health and social care.

But care charities last night dismissed the sum as ‘insulting’. Delayed discharges cost the NHS up to £5.5million a day, while a record 6.8 million languish on waiting lists.

Therese Coffey pledges £500m war chest to tackle NHS bed-blocking scandal 

Therese Coffey (pictured) has vowed to combat the NHS bed-blocking crisis with the launch of a £500million emergency fund

The fund is among a host of measures in the Government’s Our Patient Plan, which was published yesterday in a drive to avert an NHS meltdown this winter. 

The Health Secretary revealed she was motivated to tackle poor care after suffering her own A&E ordeal in July, when she waited nearly nine hours to see a doctor and still wasn’t treated. 

She said: ‘I was asked to go back the next day, so I went to a different hospital just three miles away and I was seen and treated appropriately.

‘That’s the sort of variation that we’re seeing across the NHS.’ But Mike Padgham, chairman of the Independent Care Group, said the cash ‘will not touch the sides’.

He said: ‘Announcing this £500million as if it were the answer to our prayers is insulting. This is a sticking plaster put on a gaping wound by a doctor that doesn’t see how sick the patient is.’

Shadow health secretary Wes Streeting criticised Miss Coffey¿s ¿Sesame Street¿ plan, which she has called ¿A, B, C, D¿ ¿ ¿ambulances, backlogs, care and doctors and dentists¿

Shadow health secretary Wes Streeting criticised Miss Coffey’s ‘Sesame Street’ plan, which she has called ‘A, B, C, D’ – ‘ambulances, backlogs, care and doctors and dentists’

Miss Coffey, pictured, also vowed a ‘laser-like focus’ on ambulance handover delays and revealed 45 per cent occur at just 15 NHS hospital trusts, which will be given ‘intensive’ support to improve.

Hospitals will open the equivalent of 7,000 more beds, and use ‘remote monitoring’ in people’s own homes, while the number of 999 and NHS 111 call handlers will rise.

The Government will also be ‘exploring the creation of an ambulance auxiliary service’.

Shadow health secretary Wes Streeting criticised Miss Coffey’s ‘Sesame Street’ plan, which she has called ‘A, B, C, D’ – ‘ambulances, backlogs, care and doctors and dentists’. 

And Conservative former health secretary Jeremy Hunt said: ‘It is not more targets the NHS needs, it is more doctors’.

Can Coffey’s medicine cure real ills facing healthcare?

Analysis by Shaun Wooler Health Correspondent For The Daily Mail 

The Health Secretary has quickly homed in on the health and social care issues infuriating patients and delivered a welcome plan for tackling them.

But Therese Coffey’s blueprint – named Our Patient Plan – risks being written off as a ‘wish list’ as critics warn there are too few doctors, nurses and carers to deliver its aims.

MPs, charities, trade bodies and health think-tanks have shot down the document, saying it fails to do enough to address chronic staff shortages.

The scale of the problem is huge: the NHS is short of more than 100,000 staff, with one in ten nursing posts vacant, and adult social care needs a further 165,000 workers. Many in the sector believe the £500million social care ‘downpayment’ announced yesterday is unlikely to be enough to make a significant difference.

Here we look at the patient priorities Miss Coffey has identified – or ABCD as she calls them – and why a shortage of NHS employees may make her plan difficult to achieve.

A – Ambulances

Heart attack and stroke patients face hour-long waits for an ambulance as crews are stuck outside A&E unable to offload patients and respond to new calls. Hospitals need to discharge medically-fit patients so there are beds for new cases – but a shortage of carers means there is nowhere for these frail people to go.

Carers can often earn more working in retail and trade bodies say the plan does not provide funding to offer all workers the pay rises needed to retain or attract enough staff.

Ambulances are a priority as heart attack and stroke patients face hour-long waits as crews are stuck outside A&E unable to offload patients and response to new calls

Ambulances are a priority as heart attack and stroke patients face hour-long waits as crews are stuck outside A&E unable to offload patients and response to new calls

B – Backlogs

Hospital waiting lists are at a record high of 6.8million and ministers accept this number is likely to rise before it falls.

A shortage of doctors, nurses and available hospital beds limit the rate at which patients can be admitted.

The British Medical Association says pension changes do not go far enough to stop more doctors reducing hours or retiring early. And the Royal College of Nursing is balloting its members over industrial action in a dispute over pay.

C – Care

Liz Truss wants to scrap the Health and Social Care Levy funded through the national insurance rise and has pledged to put £13billion into social care through other means – but is yet to provide details. Meanwhile care providers are grappling with soaring food and energy bills and say they are too short of money to fund pay rises for staff themselves.

Ministers must provide more funding to be able to offer staff competitive salaries that means fewer are attracted by jobs in other sectors, they say.

Liz Truss (pictured with Ms Coffey) wants to scrap the Health and Social Care Levy funded through the national insurance rise and has pledged to put £13billion into social care

Liz Truss (pictured with Ms Coffey) wants to scrap the Health and Social Care Levy funded through the national insurance rise and has pledged to put £13billion into social care

D – Doctors and Dentists

There are fewer fully-qualified, full-time equivalent GPs now than in 2015 but the population is ageing and living with more complex conditions.

The Royal College of GPs says this means it is unrealistic to expect doctors to be able to see every patient who wants an appointment as quickly as they would like. Nine in ten NHS dental practices have closed their books to new adult patients, with the British Dental Association blaming a lack of government funding for dentists turning to private work.

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