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NHS Spending Priorities. Sue Bishop, Tim Daniel, Sue Cavill and Jo Tyler. Sue Cavill Associate Director Communications and Engagement NHS Leicestershire County and Rutland. Introductions. Housekeeping. Refreshments Toilets Fire Escape Introductions Note paper Questions Blue Card.
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NHS Spending Priorities Sue Bishop, Tim Daniel, Sue Cavill and Jo Tyler
Sue CavillAssociate Director Communications and EngagementNHS Leicestershire County and Rutland Introductions
Housekeeping • Refreshments • Toilets • Fire Escape • Introductions • Note paper • Questions • Blue Card
Some Test Questions We are going to practice using the vote pads, we will ask some questions and would like you to select which of the following you consider yourself to be.
What gender are you? • Male • Female • Prefer not to say 10 You have seconds
What age range are you?If you prefer not to say, please don’t vote • Under 16 • 16-19 • 20-29 • 30-39 • 40-49 • 50-59 • 60-69 • 70-79 • 80+ 10 You have seconds
Do you consider yourself to have a disability? • Yes • No • Prefer not to say seconds 10 You have
What ethnicity are you? • Asian or Asian British • Black or Black British • Dual or Mixed Heritage • Chinese • White • Other • Prefer not to say 10 You have seconds
How much do you think the local NHS spends per person, per year? • £1,600 • £8,000 • £20,000 10 You have seconds
Local NHS has £1,600 to spend per person, per year. To pay for: • Treatments • Medicines • Equipment • Management of buildings • Running vehicles • Employing staff
Minor ear operation per operation (such as Grommets) • £200 • £400 • £700 10 You have seconds
Tonsillectomy per operation • £575 • £1,044 • £2,875 10 You have seconds
Hip replacement per operation • £5,459 • £6,789 • £7,773 10 You have seconds
Knee replacement per operation • £4,238 • £5,456 • £748 10 You have seconds
Cataracts cost for each eye • £202 • £512 • £748 10 You have seconds
Varicose veins per operation • £390 • £972 • £1,632 10 You have seconds
The average cost of an overnight stay in hospital • £120 • £250 • £480 10 You have seconds
The minimum cost of being seen in the emergency department • Free • £35 • £52 10 You have seconds
The NHS to give you a prescription of 32 Aspirin tablets? • 70p • £1.85 • £2.50 10 You have seconds
28 tablets of 20mg Atorvastatin, a common cholesterol lowering drug • £5.89 • £10.52 • £24.64 10 You have seconds
Sue BishopDirector of Finance NHS Leicestershire County and Rutland A snapshot of NHS finances
How will we address the gap? Look to reduce the price we pay Find ways to reduce demand for services Change the way services are delivered so that they can be provided at a reduced cost Reduce expenditure on “back office” costs Target investment at those areas where there is most health gain Reduce investment in areas where there is little or no clinical evidence to support the continuation of services
What might this mean? Shared Back Office Services in IM&T and FM £400k Review of service developments 2008-2012 and other 2011/12 proposals for price and volume savings, service redesign and efficiencies £12.994m 30% management cost reduction £7.187m Primary Care £2.662m 5 High Impact QIPP schemes £12.472m Prescribing – LLR formulary part of £5.706m Prescribing other - balance of £5,706k Transforming Community Services £2.764m £45.611m productivity & savings programme LLR Estates £500k Mental Health savings £926k
Dr Tim DanielConsultant in Public Health MedicineNHS Leicestershire County and Rutland How we make our spending choices
Key Considerations All Choices: • Are difficult but have to be made • Are complex, you’re not comparing ‘like with like’ • Based on reliable evidence – where available • Always involve value judgements • Use the same budget, so the best alternative needs to be considered • Must avoid the ‘rule of rescue’
Rule of Rescue • A natural human response • E.g. Air sea rescue/Chilean miners • The tendency is to offer health care to identifiable people in life threatening situations over others who are unseen and who have less urgent needs e.g. Cancer drugs vs. prevention
Principles • Rational • Fair • Consistent • Transparent • Legal
Effective heart disease prevention What is the most effective prevention in reducing deaths from heart disease? • Deaths from heart disease halved from 1981 to 2000 • 1,200 fewer deaths per year in Leicestershire • 80% of this reduction was in people not known to have heart disease • 20% in those with heart disease
Effective heart disease prevention • For those with heart disease: • 2/3 through lifestyle changes • only 1/3 through medical treatment • Overall, 24 out of every 25 deaths prevented was due to changes made outside a hospital Capewell S BMJ. 2005 Sep 17;331(7517):614. Epub 2005 Aug 17
Services providing the most health benefit per pound spent The cost to save one year of life for patients with heart disease: Aspirin £30-£50 Stop smoking £50-£300 ‘Clot buster’ drugs £3,000 Statin drugs £7,000 Angioplasty £33,000 Implantable Defibrillators £110,000