Transcript Document

Autumn Staff briefings 2013
NHS funding
As a NHS patient, care is provided free at the time you need it, whether this is
from a hospital or community nurse or psychologist. A payment is made for this
care by the local clinical commissioning group.
The local clinical commissioning group decide how best to spend a portion of the
NHS budget that is provided locally. They must consider their priorities and how
to deliver more and better quality services within their financial allocation to
improve the health outcomes for their patient.
The amount they pay for this care is often based on a variety of different factors:
•National reference costs
•Contracts
•National guidance
Our finances
We received operating income in
the year of £332.6 million from the
following sources:
We incurred operating costs of
£326.1 million which was expended
in the following areas:
Investing Activities 2012/13
(or how we spent £11.2 million of capital monies)
Maintaining the quality of
our estate £3.4 million
Creating a 32 bed low
secure unit £2.8 million
Maintaining and upgrading
our IT infrastructure £4.2 million
Replacing Medical
Equipment £0.2 million
Improving privacy &
dignity £0.6 million
Contracts
We will agree a spend with our commissioners depending on
our contract with them.
The contract will provide us with a set of key specifications
which explain the finer details of the care which needs to be
provided.
For a community hospital or mental health inpatient facility it
will often say we need to provide them with ‘bed days’ for
patients or service users living in a certain location who have
a specific medical condition.
Every year a ‘price’ for this service is agreed. We will then
advise the commissioners what we can provide for this price
and how we provide the best care for our patients and service
users.
Making decisions and
developing services
A business case is developed as part of the procurement process to
support decision making for new investments or to change or develop a
new service.
It sets out the case for undertaking a project, whether capital (a new
building) or revenue (new clinical staff to deliver a new service), weighing
up the objectives and benefits against the estimated costs and risks.
They could include:
– measurable objectives;
– appraisal of all the options available (including the ‘do nothing’ approach, an
indication of the preferred option and an explanation setting out why it is
favoured);
– demonstration of affordability and value for money;
– a timetable reflecting the life of the project.
Prioritising
The Department of Health issues an operating
framework which sets out the key priorities for the
following year and the financial rules that will
operate.
This helps us to plan and prioritise how to use our
resources.
The framework is usually published in December and
relates to the financial year starting the following
April.
Savings
Cash-releasing efficiency savings result in the cost of the
service provided being reduced.
Non-cash releasing efficiency savings occur when more
activity is provided but the cost of delivering the service
remains the same. An example of this could be a reduction in
average lengths of stay, which resulted in more patients being
treated.
Improvements in quality and efficiencies are expected to be
secured through better procurement, commissioning,
organisation and management, with any additional savings
being reinvested in new or better local services.
The funding gap
Funding in the future
Pricing for healthcare is, for the first time, underpinned by primary
legislation. The Health & Social Care Act 2012 moves responsibility
for pricing from the Department of Health, to become a shared
responsibility for NHS England and Monitor.
Under the terms of the Act, NHS England has a duty to specify
those healthcare services for which it thinks a national price should
be used, and Monitor has the duty to set that price. There is also
provision for setting rules governing not only how nationally set
pricing will work, but also how local price-setting must operate.
Future briefings
Your opportunity to hear from Trust
Executives/Senior team
Please tell us what you would like us to
focus on:
[email protected]