Lord Darzi’s Report: A worrying take on the current state of our NHS

12th Sep 2024

Lord Darzi, an independent peer and former NHS health surgeon, has just delivered a report following a nine-week review of the NHS which reflects the complaints that we see on a regular basis from our clients at McHale and Co.

The report said the NHS had been left chronically weakened by the policy of austerity of the 2010s and, in particular, a lack of investment in buildings and technology. This has left it with crumbling hospitals, fewer scanners than many other developed nations and years behind the private sector in terms of digital innovation.

This has contributed to falling levels of productivity in hospitals, with rises in staff not matched by increases in the numbers of patients being seen. It has meant hospitals have been sucking up an ever-increasing amount of the budget, when more care should be shifted into the community.  As resources and staffing have been affected adversely, this has meant that waiting lists have grown to 7.6 million people causing delay in the treatment of serious conditions such as cancer, high blood pressure, respiratory illness and diabetes, meaning that early treatment opportunities have been missed.

Lord Darzi’s report says:

Lord Darzi said: “Although I have worked in the NHS for more than 30 years, I have been shocked by what I have found during this investigation – not just in the health service, but in the state of the nation’s health.”

Nimish Patel,  Head of Personal Injury and Clinical negligence,  has said that this review follows a similar  campaign from  earlier this year  from the Royal College of Emergency Medicine’s (RCEM) “Resuscitate Emergency Care” manifesto from April 2024 but nothing has changed.

RCEM’s manifesto highlights several critical areas that require urgent action to reduce the current strain on emergency care services in the UK. A recent BBC News report details how NHS waiting times are exceeding recommended limits.

Outlining the RCEM’s “Resuscitate Emergency Care” Manifesto

The RCEM manifesto calls for measures to:

Nimish believes these measures are essential to ensure safe and effective emergency care for everyone and has seen the difficulties within healthcare provision with his own mother-in-law over the past 10 months. “We have had to fight relentlessly for basic care within hospital , with the doctors  feeling powerless  to  make decisions and  chase referrals  between  departments. The situation was also complicated by the  fact that the computer systems did not update other departments so I was often providing information to doctors that they were  not  aware about! “

Although the report focused on the NHS, Lord Darzi also warned of the “dire” state of social care, which he said was not “valued or resourced sufficiently”.

The growing gap between people’s needs and availability of publicly-funded social care in England was placing “an increasingly large burden on families and on the NHS”, he said.

Sir Keir Starmer, meanwhile, says the 2010s were the “lost decade” for the NHS, adding: “People have every right to be angry. It left the NHS unable to be there for patients today, and totally unprepared for the challenges and opportunities of tomorrow.

“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 or reform to secure its future. We know working people can’t afford to pay more, so it is reform or die.”

He acknowledged that waiting times in A&E are leading to avoidable deaths: “People’s loved ones who could have been saved. Doctors and nurses whose whole vocation is to save them – hampered from doing so. It’s devastating.”

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