Summary
In this article for NHS Confederation, Sir Chris Ham reflects on progress made against his recommendations on the conditions ICSs need to succeed and on next steps for the Hewitt review. He argues that progress has been made in acting on some of the recommendations in the report Governing the Health and Care System in England. This can be seen in plans to create a new NHS England (NHSE), reduce staffing at the centre and regions and co-produce the operating framework.
However, he highlights that more work is needed to reduce the number of national NHSE programmes, ensure greater consistency in how these programmes work and bring an end to constant bidding for funds tied to specific priorities. He recommends that high priority be given to an organisational development (OD) programme to support the development of collaboration, mutual respect and trust and determine how peer support, shared learning and improvement collaboratives can play a bigger part in improving performance in future.
Sir Chris highlights that the Hewitt review offers an opportunity for these and other issues to be addressed with priority being given to ensuring that planning guidance for 2023/24 is short and focused on a small number of national priorities, leaving scope for ICSs to add local priorities. Leaders in the DHSC and NHSE must recognise the exceptional pressures facing the health and care system and set out what a realistic set of medium-term objectives for ICSs looks like under current circumstances.
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