5 reasons for the financial crisis on the NHS

A short explantion of how the NHS is running out money

The NHS needs annual rises of about 4% to cope with increases.

Over the last five year its go an average of 0.9%.

The same level of expenditure is planned over the next 5 years.

Economists estimate this will leave the NHS short of around £22bn.

We could bridge this gap by spending the same as other simlar countries like Germany who spend 15% more per head than the UK.

This explains why the UK lags behind in the number of staff and hospital beds that it has too.Instead of raising funding the governemtn are adding to the pressure by demanding huge saving, when services are already overtsetched and not meeting the needs of patients.

50,000 ‘target’ unlikely to ease nursing crisis

By NHS Support Federation | 14th June 2022

The RCN’s latest survey on workplace staffing levels in the NHS offers sobering evidence of how one of the Tories’ 2019 manifesto … Read more

Cuts to hospital discharge programme fuel crisis

By NHS Support Federation | 7th June 2022

NHS England’s response to the new austerity embodied in Rishi Sunak’s spending review from last autumn has been to slash … Read more

New money insufficient to stop deficits and cuts

By NHS Support Federation | 6th June 2022

NHS England has belatedly come up with a promise of more money, which it claims would cover some of the … Read more

Top of page