Reports
Topics
- Accountability 4
- Availability 1
- Care home 2
- Competition 1
- Conflicts of Interest 1
- Conflicts of interest in Healthcare 3
- Contracting 5
- Covid-19 4
- DHSC 1
- Governance 1
- Government’s response to the COVID 19 pandemic 3
- Healthcare Fraud 2
- Inflation 1
- Joint venture 1
- Marketisation 5
- NHS & Social Care Funding 4
- NHS Trusts 1
- OHID 1
- PFI 3
- PHE 1
- Pandemic 1
- Patient Safety 1
- Patient Safety in Private Hospitals 4
- Patient involvement 2
- Preparing for a pandemic 2
- Private Finance Initaitive 5
- Professionalism in Healthcare 1
- Public Health 2
- STPs 5
- Service reconfiguration 3
- Social Care 1
- The finances of the care home sector 4
- The funding gap 3
- The outsourcing of NHS eye care to the private sector 2
- UKHSA 1
Sustainability and Transformation Plans: 5 key questions for planners
The plans, which each cover an average population of about 1.25 million, have been produced under extreme time pressure and in the absence of a legal basis for joint planning between the different organisations in the NHS and local government that are involved.
Can we afford to close any more A&E departments? Evidence from North West London
Closing A&E departments has led to a deterioration in the performance of those that remain in North West London. This analysis warns of the risk to patients if further A&Es are closed.
The Sustainability and Transformation Plans: a critical assessment
The assessment finds that the plans rest on implausible assumptions and lack credible implementation measures. It concludes that the scale of the planned reduction in hospital services implies rationing and risks the collapse of some services.
‘Transforming Services Together’: what does East London’s plan for health services imply for East Londoners?
Transforming Services Together (TST) is a five-year plan to radically reconfigure health services in the London boroughs of Newham, Tower Hamlets and Waltham Forest.
Sustainability and Transformations Fund – why it is not enough and what are its implications for the provider sector?
This analysis looks at:
Why is the STF not sufficient to eliminate the providers’ deficit in 2016/17?
What are the implications for providers who accept the funding, and for the NHS in general?