Skip to content

This site uses cookies

By clicking "Accept", you agree to the storing of cookies on your device to enhance site navigation, analyze site usage and enhance user experience. Learn more

Blog

NHS Providers Conference: familiar faces, familiar challenges

Author James Mole
Published 17 Nov 2022
gettyimages-1440003417.jpg
Share:
Health

Healthcare is evolving rapidly. To stand out from the crowd requires a potent combination of rich insight, breakthrough ideas and flawless execution of your healthcare pr strategy.

Other related content

Public Affairs and Policy

Notes from Labour conference: the passage of power?

Healthcare Communication

A Psychedelic Renaissance? The Science and Promise of Psychedelic-Assisted Therapy

Public Affairs and Policy

Notes from Labour conference: the passage of power?

This week, Hanover joined hundreds of others working in health, in getting together in Liverpool for the NHS Providers conference. This is the second big in-person conference for the health system since Covid, and the focus of speakers and delegates alike was money and capacity, and the shortage of both.

The health secretary faced questions about today’s fiscal statement and how to protect capacity in mental health services, while the NHS chief executive outlined a plan to work efficiently through primary care to get people referred for cancer symptoms faster.

Underpinning all the discussion in the main hall and exhibition spaces was concerns about how NHS staff will get through this winter while maintaining care for patients, with financial pressure and stretched capacity being compounded by equivalent challenges in social care, alongside workforce shortages, made worse by a potential strike over pay.

WHILE THE SHAPE OF THE SHORT-TERM CHALLENGE HAS CHANGED, IT IS THE SAME LONG-TERM OBSTACLES THAT EXISTED PRE-COVID THAT ARE STILL BEING WRESTLED WITH.

What was striking this week is that while the shape of the short-term challenge has changed, it is the same long-term obstacles that existed pre-covid that are still being wrestled with. Covid has made capacity and financial pressures more acute, but the lack of progress in tackling the long-term success factors of social care capacity, and filling the one in ten vacancies across the NHS workforce, remain almost entirely unaddressed.

And so the Chancellor today confirming new action on both these challenges, will be welcome news to those in the health and care sectors.

Conferences like these are an important way for people to share ideas, spread good practice, network, and often commiserate, but there is a low ceiling on what these gatherings and the people at them, can achieve without genuine progress in improving social care and bolstering the health service workforce.

© Hanover Communications 2024, an AVENIR GLOBAL company. All rights reserved.

Search

Subscribe