Episodes
This year sets the NHS one of its toughest financial challenges as pandemic cash dries up and funding shortfalls deepen. We hear how three integrated care systems are already warning of significant consequences from the current financial requirements, and explore how the NHS plans to break even in 2024-25. With Henry Anderson, Lawrence Dunhill and Nicholas Carding. Send views and questions to [email protected]. You can listen to HSJ Health Check on this page, or subscribe...
Published 04/26/24
Published 04/26/24
This week guest host Ben Clover discusses alarming developments in urgent care plus the Silicon Valley firm getting established in the NHS, with HSJ reporters Emily Townsend and Joe Talora.
Published 04/19/24
2022-23 was probably the worst ever winter for the NHS, after a steep collapse in performance. This year’s been a little better — new figures confirm — but how was this achieved, and what does it mean for coming months?   This week’s HSJ Health Check podcast reviews the latest figures on emergency care performance — across A&E waits, ambulance delays and response times, discharge and length of stay. On nearly all measures, services have been better this winter than the year before, but...
Published 04/11/24
On this episode we discuss the quality of maternity services in the NHS, which have remained firmly in the spotlight. We cover a recent HSJ investigation into delayed inductions of labour and cover the broader challenges facing maternity services amid multiple inquiries and more 'inadequate' CQC ratings.  Also more on why families whose babies died in the East Kent maternity scandal are still having to prove legal liability to get any compensation. 
Published 04/05/24
With one working day left before the new financial year, the NHS’s instructions for 2024-25 have finally been published.   HSJ’s James Illman, Annabelle Collins, and Dave West unpack what's in this year’s guidance and talk more about the sticking points that caused the long delay.
Published 03/29/24
HSJ revealed this week the cost of building “40 new hospitals” in the NHS has increased by £4bn, so on this episode we dig into what’s driving this and if it will get past the Treasury.    Also this week  – when PFI deals go wrong and how a fire at the Whittington Hospital in north London has led to a High Court case. 
Published 03/22/24
This week we discuss the implications of a long-awaited independent review into a patient safety scandal at Salford Royal Hospital, in which multiple patients were harmed by John Williamson, the former head of the spinal division. We cover why concerns about care quality resurfaced long after the trust concluded its review in 2016 and why it failed to properly investigate at the time.  Also more on news that an Australian tech firm backed by one of China’s richest people is set to win the...
Published 03/15/24
HSJ Health Check debates the new NHS staff survey results, with trust CEO Matthew Winn, survey expert Chris Graham, and HSJ's Nick Kituno. Some key findings are improved this year, but others reveal a service still struggling to recover from the pandemic. There's also an alarming increase in reports of discrimination. Meanwhile, Matthew and Chris argue there can be no 'quick fixes' or gaming when it comes to being a good employer, so leaders should focus on looking after staff and making...
Published 03/08/24
There has been a huge increase in the proportion of treatments done by the private sector compared to before the pandemic, and for the first time we’ve worked out which parts of the country send most patients to independent hospitals. Also, more on news that NHS capital budgets have been raided to pay for staff pay rises and the cost of strikes. Read our full regional analysis of private sector use at the following link: www.hsj.co.uk/quality-and-perfor…ls/7036620.article
Published 03/01/24
A controversial new care model has come under fire from trust leaders, who have warned patients and clinicians are coming to harm.    We discuss the concerns surrounding the national roll-out of Right Care, Right Person, and why the emergency services have ended up playing a “high stakes game of chicken”.   Also this week, we discuss NHS England’s ambitions to digitise one in three patient interactions with the NHS and bold new plans for the NHS app. 
Published 02/23/24
We talk more about the decimation of England’s national public health unit less than three years after it was created. We cover the motivations behind this, the impact it could have on integrated care systems’ plans and whether Labour will reverse it. Also, the latest on the planning guidance and how its become entangled with the Budget negotiations.  With Dave West, James Illman and Annabelle Collins.
Published 02/16/24
This week we discuss a major obstacle in the planning guidance negotiations  –  how high to set the A&E four-hour target. The government is pushing for a new target set at over 80%, while NHS England lobbies for one just one percentage point higher than the current target.  Also this week more on how the risk in emergency care has shifted from ambulances to acute hospitals and the thinking behind controversial regional guidance to prioritise patients in A&E who are less unwell to...
Published 02/08/24
Two of the most successful NHS hospital chief executives – one current, Glen Burley, and one former, Dame Alwen Williams – join the HSJ Health Check podcast, arguing that the sometimes-contentious spread of the ‘group model’ and joint leadership will keep on spreading. The Foundation Group CEO and former boss of Barts Health Trust – one of the mothers of the hospital group model in the NHS – also talk about how to make it work, managing exec time, staying in touch with the front line, and...
Published 02/02/24
This week for the first time a study has revealed the number of patients on PIFU pathways has not translated into a significant reduction in follow up appointments.  Also, a governance row across some of the biggest trusts in east London, while a major teaching hospital on the other side of the Thames sees its finances explode. With Ben Clover, Annabelle Collins and James Illman
Published 01/26/24
Dental budgets are being raided by ICSs to fund other services in the middle of an unprecedented access crisis. We cover a broken financial system, a discredited contract and increasing political pressure to fix NHS dentistry. Also we review how NHS England is faring on its pledge to increase overall primary care investment. 
Published 01/19/24
HSJ recently revealed the dramatic differences in access to specialist medical treatments around the country.    We discuss what’s driving this inequality, who is missing out and what big-city trusts are doing to improve access.   Also, an update on how the NHS coped during the longest ever junior doctor strikes over Christmas and the New Year and why the planning guidance for 2024 is still yet to be published. 
Published 01/12/24
In our final episode of the year we make our predictions for what 2024 could hold for the NHS, including the first integrated care system merger, how the strikes will pan out and manager regulation.    Thanks for listening and we’ll be back in January! 
Published 12/22/23
Three years ago the NHS was the first healthcare system in the world to set an ambition to become net zero, but it struggles to prioritise this in the face of daily operational and financial pressures. This week we discuss in depth the green targets, progress already made and why, despite competing priorities, they should still be high up leaders’ agenda.  Also, an update on what systems are being told to do to cope this winter.
Published 12/15/23
This week we’re joined by Thea Stein, who recently moved into think tank world after nine years running an NHS trust.   We cover her reflections on her time at Leeds Community Healthcare Trust, why she is fed up of “visions” of integrated care and much more interested in the tricky detail, and the radical policies needed to recruit and retain more staff. 
Published 12/08/23
Leaders at Maidstone and Tunbridge Wells Trust have been heavily criticised in an independent inquiry into the actions of former maintenance supervisor David Fuller. We cover the mistakes made by the trust that enabled him to abuse hundreds of bodies in its mortuary over 15 years and what the rest of the NHS must do in response to this horrific case. Also, an update on the government’s pay offer to consultants and why its made the Royal College of Nursing so angry.
Published 12/01/23
US firm Palantir has officially been awarded the lucrative federated data platform deal, which is one of the biggest NHS data projects in recent years.   This week Nick Carding, Joe Talora and Annabelle Collins discuss the controversy surrounding the deal, what the risks and benefits are for the NHS and what’s next in its implementation. 
Published 11/24/23
A trust that gave its name to a controversial A&E policy has seen performance improve significantly, so this week we discuss how North Bristol Trust handled the risks and how quickly its model could spread throughout the NHS.    Also, NHSE chief Amanda Pritchard told MPs this week there has been a ”misunderstanding” about productivity in the NHS - we discuss what’s actually going on behind the scenes.
Published 11/17/23
This week Annabelle and James are joined by Saffron Cordery, deputy chief executive of NHS Providers. We’re looking ahead to winter and an election year, in which the NHS faces ongoing strikes, stalling progress on waiting lists and challenging finances.  We also cover the damage done by ’short-termism’ and why turnover of trust CEOs is getting worse. 
Published 11/09/23
An increasing number of hospitals are appointing shared CEOs and chairs and with more large ’groups’ being created  – this week we discuss the benefits and drawbacks to this new(ish) way of running things.  We focus on two recent examples - the Barts Health Group in London and University Hospitals of Leicester, which as of this week shares a chair and CEO with two neighbouring trusts. With Ben Clover, Annabelle Collins and Dave West. 
Published 11/03/23