Developing appropriate models for
    NHS hospitals in the new
          environment
      Socialist Health Association
              November 24
              Paul Corrigan
Developing appropriate business models for
      NHS hospitals in the new environment
• Arguments for continuity
1  Drivers for change The Reforms 1-4
2  Drivers for change The money
3  Drivers for change medicine
•  What does this mean for the leadership of
   hospitals
• How do they understand changing their
   business model?
Arguments for Continuity

• Politics- The public makes sure we are untouchable
• Money- We will always be bailed out. Too big to fail
• History- we have been here for 60 years and will be
  there for another 60
• Muddle- Hospitals are too complex you cant expect
  clarity
• Management- Our doctors wont change
• Cost base- 75% of our costs are fixed
• Reform – commissioners are feeble and will not disturb
  us
1        Reforming the Centre

• The Secretary of State retains responsibility for ensuring the provision of a
  comprehensive NHS
• National Commissioning Board set up receives resources and mandate
  from SoS but is not Whitehall. DH is the client side
• NCB is a new form of organisation doing new things. It has a CEO and will
  now set up a system to organise commissioning
1 NCB commissions GP services; national and regional services and some
  others
2   NCB distributes resource, provides contracts/performance management
    to clinical commissioning groups that they will soon set out authorisation
    process Accountability to NCB is ongoing
• Both clinical networks and clinical senates will be hosted by the NHS
  Commissioning Board; they will not be organisations or new forms of
  bureaucracy.
• Set up English Public Health Service and provides resources (4-5% of NHS)
  for local commissioning through local authorities
2         Reforming Local Commissioning

•   No single national new GP led commissioning system from April 2013
•   “Where there is the will and capacity” statutory based clinical commissioning
    consortia will be setup. They will reflect local authority boundaries
•   Where clinical commissioning groups are not or are only partly authorised the NHS
    Commissioning Board will commission
•   A duty to promote integrated care laid on clinical commissioning groups
•   Governance arrangements are outlined in the Bill
•   Transparent Accountability with quality premium agreed by Parliament
•   Public Health Commissioned through Local Authority
•   Health and well being boards run by the local authority are integrative
3       Reforming the provision of health services
                 for NHS patients
• We strongly expect that the majority of remaining NHS trusts will be
  authorised as foundation trusts by April 2014.
• To enable time for foundation trusts’ governors to build capability in
  holding their boards to account, we will further extend, to 2016, the
  transitional period where Monitor retains specific oversight powers
  over foundation trusts.
• We will have an effective failure regime that ends the culture and
  practice of hidden bailouts and gets the right incentives into the
  NHS, whilst protecting essential services.
• Level playing fields with public and private patients choose between
  providers
• New integrative providers .
• New providers will have to demonstrate better vfm AND realise the
  benefits themselves
4 Managing a system rather than an
                 organisation
• Monitor becomes a system regulator as in other quasi
  markets
• Monitor’s core duty will be to protect and promote patients’
  interests.
• Monitor will ensure continuity of service
• It will set prices for NHS services in consultation with NHS
  Commissioning Board
• It will develop prices for integrative services
• Monitor to regulate all NHS providers of care
• CQC will provide licence to trade
• Patient choice drive change through an information
  revolution
Drivers for change The money

• Demand for health care will increase by about
  20% in 5 years
• Most of this will be in long term conditions
• Resources will increase by about 1%
• The NHS needs to develop significantly better
  outcomes for the same resource
• If the NHS is not to go bust this must mean a
  dramatic drop in emergency bed use as primary
  and self care manages better.
• In practice the tariff will deflate
Drivers for change medicine

• Changes in drugs has meant and will mean
  earlier exit from hospital and more ability to
  be treated at home
• (What percentage of chemotherapy will be
  carried out at home in 2020)
• Specialisation and hyperspecialisation will
  increase
• Care will move into the home and the
  community
What does this mean for the leadership of
                   hospitals
• Your commissioners will change and then may change
  again
• If commissioners succeed there will be less of the
  current work going into hospitals
• If commissioners fail the system will become bankrupt
• The business model of offering to do everything for
  everybody all the time cannot work
• Each Board needs to develop specific business models
• To achieve this you will need agility and the public can
  stop that.
• The public need to be engaged in this throughout
How do they understand changing their
               business model?
• An increasing number of Boards say “ We cant go on like
  this” Vital first step to say and mean
• The promises of every hospital doing everything for
  everybody is a false one and must be explained as such
• Need to work out what commissioning customer will want
  and develop that to scale
• Need to change the % of fixed to variable costs
• Need to stop doing things that don't and cant work
• Must develop ongoing debate about the truth of all of this
  with the public- otherwise they always say now
• Need to develop a new organisational agility to keep up
  with the pace of change

Corrigan

  • 1.
    Developing appropriate modelsfor NHS hospitals in the new environment Socialist Health Association November 24 Paul Corrigan
  • 2.
    Developing appropriate businessmodels for NHS hospitals in the new environment • Arguments for continuity 1 Drivers for change The Reforms 1-4 2 Drivers for change The money 3 Drivers for change medicine • What does this mean for the leadership of hospitals • How do they understand changing their business model?
  • 3.
    Arguments for Continuity •Politics- The public makes sure we are untouchable • Money- We will always be bailed out. Too big to fail • History- we have been here for 60 years and will be there for another 60 • Muddle- Hospitals are too complex you cant expect clarity • Management- Our doctors wont change • Cost base- 75% of our costs are fixed • Reform – commissioners are feeble and will not disturb us
  • 4.
    1 Reforming the Centre • The Secretary of State retains responsibility for ensuring the provision of a comprehensive NHS • National Commissioning Board set up receives resources and mandate from SoS but is not Whitehall. DH is the client side • NCB is a new form of organisation doing new things. It has a CEO and will now set up a system to organise commissioning 1 NCB commissions GP services; national and regional services and some others 2 NCB distributes resource, provides contracts/performance management to clinical commissioning groups that they will soon set out authorisation process Accountability to NCB is ongoing • Both clinical networks and clinical senates will be hosted by the NHS Commissioning Board; they will not be organisations or new forms of bureaucracy. • Set up English Public Health Service and provides resources (4-5% of NHS) for local commissioning through local authorities
  • 5.
    2 Reforming Local Commissioning • No single national new GP led commissioning system from April 2013 • “Where there is the will and capacity” statutory based clinical commissioning consortia will be setup. They will reflect local authority boundaries • Where clinical commissioning groups are not or are only partly authorised the NHS Commissioning Board will commission • A duty to promote integrated care laid on clinical commissioning groups • Governance arrangements are outlined in the Bill • Transparent Accountability with quality premium agreed by Parliament • Public Health Commissioned through Local Authority • Health and well being boards run by the local authority are integrative
  • 6.
    3 Reforming the provision of health services for NHS patients • We strongly expect that the majority of remaining NHS trusts will be authorised as foundation trusts by April 2014. • To enable time for foundation trusts’ governors to build capability in holding their boards to account, we will further extend, to 2016, the transitional period where Monitor retains specific oversight powers over foundation trusts. • We will have an effective failure regime that ends the culture and practice of hidden bailouts and gets the right incentives into the NHS, whilst protecting essential services. • Level playing fields with public and private patients choose between providers • New integrative providers . • New providers will have to demonstrate better vfm AND realise the benefits themselves
  • 7.
    4 Managing asystem rather than an organisation • Monitor becomes a system regulator as in other quasi markets • Monitor’s core duty will be to protect and promote patients’ interests. • Monitor will ensure continuity of service • It will set prices for NHS services in consultation with NHS Commissioning Board • It will develop prices for integrative services • Monitor to regulate all NHS providers of care • CQC will provide licence to trade • Patient choice drive change through an information revolution
  • 8.
    Drivers for changeThe money • Demand for health care will increase by about 20% in 5 years • Most of this will be in long term conditions • Resources will increase by about 1% • The NHS needs to develop significantly better outcomes for the same resource • If the NHS is not to go bust this must mean a dramatic drop in emergency bed use as primary and self care manages better. • In practice the tariff will deflate
  • 9.
    Drivers for changemedicine • Changes in drugs has meant and will mean earlier exit from hospital and more ability to be treated at home • (What percentage of chemotherapy will be carried out at home in 2020) • Specialisation and hyperspecialisation will increase • Care will move into the home and the community
  • 10.
    What does thismean for the leadership of hospitals • Your commissioners will change and then may change again • If commissioners succeed there will be less of the current work going into hospitals • If commissioners fail the system will become bankrupt • The business model of offering to do everything for everybody all the time cannot work • Each Board needs to develop specific business models • To achieve this you will need agility and the public can stop that. • The public need to be engaged in this throughout
  • 11.
    How do theyunderstand changing their business model? • An increasing number of Boards say “ We cant go on like this” Vital first step to say and mean • The promises of every hospital doing everything for everybody is a false one and must be explained as such • Need to work out what commissioning customer will want and develop that to scale • Need to change the % of fixed to variable costs • Need to stop doing things that don't and cant work • Must develop ongoing debate about the truth of all of this with the public- otherwise they always say now • Need to develop a new organisational agility to keep up with the pace of change