Berliner Boersenzeitung - Starmer to say UK's national health service needs 'major surgery'

EUR -
AED 3.879496
AFN 71.757131
ALL 98.290674
AMD 417.887896
ANG 1.9018
AOA 962.19481
ARS 1066.276545
AUD 1.623289
AWG 1.901191
AZN 1.790669
BAM 1.956221
BBD 2.130548
BDT 126.097119
BGN 1.955496
BHD 0.398091
BIF 3117.544274
BMD 1.056217
BND 1.418339
BOB 7.291534
BRL 6.349027
BSD 1.055222
BTN 89.103742
BWP 14.415032
BYN 3.452726
BYR 20701.856302
BZD 2.126947
CAD 1.478936
CDF 3031.34326
CHF 0.930847
CLF 0.037397
CLP 1031.892312
CNY 7.648385
CNH 7.65186
COP 4666.578649
CRC 538.923559
CUC 1.056217
CUP 27.989755
CVE 110.288197
CZK 25.256246
DJF 187.909524
DKK 7.457749
DOP 63.714608
DZD 140.858172
EGP 52.381867
ERN 15.843257
ETB 130.727772
FJD 2.392439
FKP 0.83369
GBP 0.831723
GEL 2.888761
GGP 0.83369
GHS 16.303429
GIP 0.83369
GMD 74.991114
GNF 9094.171116
GTQ 8.141712
GYD 220.69642
HKD 8.221192
HNL 26.698121
HRK 7.534271
HTG 138.343028
HUF 411.62262
IDR 16749.438885
ILS 3.844377
IMP 0.83369
INR 89.326608
IQD 1382.290743
IRR 44440.337179
ISK 145.662634
JEP 0.83369
JMD 166.256543
JOD 0.748964
JPY 158.47218
KES 137.044409
KGS 91.678667
KHR 4253.015353
KMF 492.725985
KPW 950.595042
KRW 1474.463336
KWD 0.324683
KYD 0.879385
KZT 540.393663
LAK 23158.871095
LBP 94493.975284
LKR 306.744519
LRD 189.41253
LSL 19.175133
LTL 3.118735
LVL 0.638895
LYD 5.148083
MAD 10.559821
MDL 19.321064
MGA 4927.036323
MKD 61.539109
MMK 3430.552129
MNT 3589.025847
MOP 8.458579
MRU 42.094249
MUR 49.061075
MVR 16.318516
MWK 1829.784866
MXN 21.549745
MYR 4.694896
MZN 67.47977
NAD 19.175133
NGN 1760.188127
NIO 38.829822
NOK 11.695973
NPR 142.568687
NZD 1.785644
OMR 0.406656
PAB 1.055227
PEN 3.959527
PGK 4.255016
PHP 61.998362
PKR 293.348201
PLN 4.29591
PYG 8229.730991
QAR 3.846309
RON 4.975707
RSD 116.952797
RUB 113.551418
RWF 1468.843714
SAR 3.968166
SBD 8.862286
SCR 14.639535
SDG 635.313851
SEK 11.524232
SGD 1.415088
SHP 0.83369
SLE 23.97376
SLL 22148.350702
SOS 603.026837
SRD 37.39538
STD 21861.562682
SVC 9.232942
SYP 2653.777147
SZL 19.183035
THB 36.181249
TJS 11.501983
TMT 3.707322
TND 3.333401
TOP 2.473766
TRY 36.641102
TTD 7.170508
TWD 34.330756
TZS 2788.413485
UAH 43.88443
UGX 3893.819002
USD 1.056217
UYU 45.199507
UZS 13574.148262
VES 49.890432
VND 26771.408202
VUV 125.396223
WST 2.948526
XAF 656.094999
XAG 0.034383
XAU 0.000397
XCD 2.854479
XDR 0.80717
XOF 656.094999
XPF 119.331742
YER 263.975043
ZAR 19.055409
ZMK 9507.222275
ZMW 28.463987
ZWL 340.101494
  • CMSC

    -0.0500

    24.52

    -0.2%

  • GSK

    0.3100

    34.33

    +0.9%

  • RIO

    0.2900

    62.32

    +0.47%

  • SCS

    -0.0700

    13.47

    -0.52%

  • AZN

    0.8400

    67.2

    +1.25%

  • NGG

    0.5000

    63.33

    +0.79%

  • CMSD

    -0.0700

    24.36

    -0.29%

  • BTI

    0.2300

    37.94

    +0.61%

  • RYCEF

    0.1100

    6.91

    +1.59%

  • JRI

    0.1700

    13.41

    +1.27%

  • BP

    0.1700

    29.13

    +0.58%

  • BCC

    -2.0100

    146.4

    -1.37%

  • RBGPF

    1.0000

    62

    +1.61%

  • RELX

    0.2400

    47.05

    +0.51%

  • VOD

    0.1100

    8.97

    +1.23%

  • BCE

    0.3900

    27.02

    +1.44%

Starmer to say UK's national health service needs 'major surgery'
Starmer to say UK's national health service needs 'major surgery' / Photo: Daniel LEAL - AFP

Starmer to say UK's national health service needs 'major surgery'

Prime Minister Keir Starmer will warn Thursday that Britain's state-run National Health Service must "reform or die" after an independent report said the venerated institution was in a "critical condition".

Text size:

Starmer, whose Labour party was elected by a landslide in July, will promise "the biggest reimagining" of the NHS since it was founded 76 years ago.

His speech in central London follows the publication of a 142-page investigation which found that the health of Britons had deteriorated over the past 15 years.

The report's author, Ara Darzi, an unaffiliated Lord in parliament's upper chamber, said the NHS had fallen into "disrepair" due to a lack of investment, top-down reorganisation and the coronavirus pandemic.

"What we need is the courage to deliver long-term reform -- major surgery not sticking plaster solutions," Starmer was due to say, according to excerpts of his speech released to reporters.

"The NHS is at a fork in the road, and we have a choice about how it should meet these rising demands.

"Raise taxes on working people to meet the ever-higher costs of ageing population -- or reform to secure its future.

"We know working people can't afford to pay more, so it's reform or die," Starmer was expected to say.

Health minister Wes Streeting told Sky News there would be "three big shifts" -- moving certain services from hospitals to the community, fully switching from analog to digital and "giving staff the tools to do the job, so that we tackle that productivity challenge."

He said the government would not "do as the Conservatives did, which is just pour more money into a broken model, and fail to reform."

- 'Reimagining' -

Labour dumped the Conservatives out of power on July 4 in part on a pledge to "fix" the NHS, accusing the Tories of having "broken" it during their 14 years in power.

Darzi's report notes that the NHS is seeing a surge in patients suffering multiple long-term illnesses such as diabetes and high blood pressure.

It says the UK has higher cancer rates than other countries and is lagging behind in its treatment of major conditions.

It also notes that waiting lists have swelled to 7.6 million and that a tenth of patients at accident and emergency wards now wait 12 hours or more before being seen.

Darzi said that he was "shocked" by what he discovered but added that the NHS's vital signs "remain strong".

Starmer was expected to outline the three areas of reform for a 10-year plan to "turn around the NHS", whose universal model is a source of British pride, despite its shortcomings in meeting demand.

Just over a year ago, his Tory predecessor Rishi Sunak announced a 15-year drive to recruit more than 300,000 staff to deal with a chronic shortage of doctors and nurses.

At the time, it was estimated that the NHS would have a staff shortfall of 360,000 by 2037 because of an ageing population, a lack of domestically trained health workers and difficulties recruiting and retaining staff, in part because of new visa rules.

"The challenge is clear before us; the change could amount to the biggest reimagining of our NHS since its birth," the prime minister was set to say.

Starmer, whose mother was an NHS nurse, has spent much of his first two months in power blaming the Tories for leaving Labour a dire inheritance in sectors ranging from health to the economy and prisons.

The Conservatives, whose leader Sunak is the son of an NHS doctor and a pharmacist, accuse him of exaggerating the country's problems as a way of laying the groundwork for future tax increases.

(A.Lehmann--BBZ)