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Kerr Report

Health Minister Andy Kerr on new framework for future for NHS

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This item was published during the term of a previous administration that ended in April 2007

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Framework for the future of the NHS

25/05/2005

A framework for the future of the NHS in Scotland was published today.

An expert group, led by international cancer specialist Professor David Kerr, has produced a detailed set of recommendations on how the health service could be shaped over the coming decades. It represents the culmination of 14 months of investigation.

Health Minister Andy Kerr welcomed its publication.

Mr Kerr said: "We called for a bold and confident plan and that is what I have been given.

"Patients expect their care to be personal, and to be delivered to them as locally as possible. It also has to be as specialised as necessary and of the highest quality.

"We want to continue to reduce health inequalities, cut waiting times, and deliver the right services in the right place through an efficient workforce and modern facilities.

"The Kerr Group support these aims and their report reflects the realities of today's health service - 90 per cent of all care is delivered locally in a non-hospital setting, through staff like health visitors, practice nurses, physios, pharmacists and family doctors. That is where we can make the biggest improvements to people's health.

"There is no doubt that our response to the report will change the way health care is delivered in the future. Currently care can be reactive, hospital centred and geared towards acute conditions. The future focus will be on integrated, anticipatory care, embedded in communities and geared towards long term conditions.

"The Kerr Group involved the public, patients and NHS staff in developing these recommendations which I now want to consider in detail. In the meantime though, there are some elements of the report that we can start to implement now.

"I want to see Boards get to work on identifying patients with long term conditions who are most at risk of hospitalisation. This will enable them to provide proactive, co-ordinated care in the community.

"I also want priority given to care in deprived areas to reduce health inequalities. This will mean taking a more proactive approach to seeking out people who are most likely to need care in the future and helping them to access it earlier.

"I also share Professor Kerr's view on separating emergency care from planned care, so that planned care can be taken forward faster for patients and with fewer cancellations for them because of emergencies. I want to work with Boards to take this forward."

Professor Kerr said: "The NHS in Scotland has to change because of changing health care needs and demands, and the need to meet future challenges, such as an ageing population and advances in treatment.

"However members of the public need to take responsibility, for their own wellbeing at the same time as accepting modernisation is necessary.

"Unless we are brave enough to challenge the status quo together, we won't be able to build the right service. Scotland's future health care needs to focus on providing care for an older population with long term conditions. That kind of care will be provided not in hospitals but by proactive primary care.

"We need to focus on getting the right services out in the community rather than on the bricks and mortar of hospital buildings.

"We want to see much more regional planning for hospital based services, with new networks of hospitals sharing the responsibility for providing key elements of acute care."

Key recommendations:

  • All NHS Boards to put in place a systematic approach to caring for people (especially older people) with long term conditions with a view to managing their care at home or in the community and, where possible, without hospitalisation.
  • Action in deprived areas, through anticipatory care, to prevent future ill-health and reduce health inequality.
  • Manage demand for planned care to maximise use of capacity and to inform patient choice by streaming it from unscheduled care, treating day surgery as the norm (rather than inpatient surgery), enabling better community based access to diagnostics and developing referral management services.
  • Support and encouragement for patients and their carers to manage their own health care needs and to help others with similar conditions.
  • Implement urgently a national single information and communications technology system, including an electronic patient record and the development of tele-medicine, as a means to improve access, quality, develop clinical evidence and connect up the NHS.
  • Empower multi-disciplinary teams in local casualty departments to provide the vast majority of hospital-based unscheduled care - networked by tele-medicine to consultant led emergency units.
  • Concentrate specialised or complex care on fewer sites to secure clinical benefit or manage clinical risk.
  • Develop networks of rural hospitals to ensure continued access to key elements of acute care and establish a Clinical School for Rural Health Care to ensure workforce development.
  • Accelerate the development of regional planning for hospital based health services.
  • Set a clear agenda for Community Health Partnerships working across the boundaries between primary and secondary care and with partners in social care to shift the balance of care.

The Kerr report assesses the current state of the NHS, and proposes a new model:

Current model - to - Proposed new model

  • Geared towards acute conditions - to - Geared towards long-term conditions
  • Hospital centred - to - Locally responsive
  • Doctor dependent - to - Team based
  • Episodic care - to - Continuous care
  • Disjointed care - to - Integrated care
  • Reactive care - to - Preventative care
  • Patient as passive recipient - to - Patient as partner
  • Self care infrequent - to - Self care encouraged and facilitated
  • Carers undervalued - to - Carers supported as partners
  • Low tech - to - High tech

The report represents the culmination of 14 months of investigation and consideration by an expert team, drawn from across the health service. Together the team travelled the length and breadth of Scotland listening to the views of the public and professionals.

Page updated: Wednesday, May 25, 2005