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Budget 2016: George Osborne cuts £1.1bn from NHS repairs fund | Budget 2016: George Osborne cuts £1.1bn from NHS repairs fund |
(3 days later) | |
The NHS repairs budget has been slashed by £1.1bn, in an unpublicised cut included in George Osborne's 2016 Budget. | The NHS repairs budget has been slashed by £1.1bn, in an unpublicised cut included in George Osborne's 2016 Budget. |
The Chancellor did not mention the cut in his Budget speech, and the 30% decrease in funding was only uncovered following a Labour-sponsored review of the Budget by the House of Commons Library. | The Chancellor did not mention the cut in his Budget speech, and the 30% decrease in funding was only uncovered following a Labour-sponsored review of the Budget by the House of Commons Library. |
The capital budget of the NHS is used to fund repairs and replace out-of-date or broken equipment. The NHS was expected to be allocated £4.8bn to cover this area, but the Budget revealed the health service will only be receiving £3.7bn of capital budget, | The capital budget of the NHS is used to fund repairs and replace out-of-date or broken equipment. The NHS was expected to be allocated £4.8bn to cover this area, but the Budget revealed the health service will only be receiving £3.7bn of capital budget, |
It will cost the NHS an estimated £4.3bn to complete all outstanding maintenance work. This includes £458m of repairs classified as "high-risk", which could endanger patients' lives and wellbeing if they are not repaired. | It will cost the NHS an estimated £4.3bn to complete all outstanding maintenance work. This includes £458m of repairs classified as "high-risk", which could endanger patients' lives and wellbeing if they are not repaired. |
Serious issues classified as "high-risk" include leaking roofs and out-of-date scanners. | |
Speaking to the Guardian, shadow health secretary Heidi Alexander said: “Five years of Tory neglect has left many hospitals with ageing equipment and a growing bill for urgent maintenance. | Speaking to the Guardian, shadow health secretary Heidi Alexander said: “Five years of Tory neglect has left many hospitals with ageing equipment and a growing bill for urgent maintenance. |
“However, rather than properly investing in our NHS, George Osborne has raided the money hospitals need to carry out these essential repairs and replace out-of-date equipment. This is bad for patient care." | “However, rather than properly investing in our NHS, George Osborne has raided the money hospitals need to carry out these essential repairs and replace out-of-date equipment. This is bad for patient care." |
But a spokesperson for the Department of Health rejected the criticism, saying: “This government is investing £10bn in the NHS’s own plan for the future, and we’ve made almost £4bn available for capital projects this year which local trusts can apply for to undertake maintenance or building projects." | But a spokesperson for the Department of Health rejected the criticism, saying: “This government is investing £10bn in the NHS’s own plan for the future, and we’ve made almost £4bn available for capital projects this year which local trusts can apply for to undertake maintenance or building projects." |
Last year, the Chancellor of the Exchequer asserted that he would not be cutting core NHS services, despite reducing funding for the organisation as a whole. | Last year, the Chancellor of the Exchequer asserted that he would not be cutting core NHS services, despite reducing funding for the organisation as a whole. |
However, an independent review by the Health Foundation revealed his planned cuts would actually cut the total NHS budget by 20% over the next five years. | However, an independent review by the Health Foundation revealed his planned cuts would actually cut the total NHS budget by 20% over the next five years. |
The news follows the revelation, in a separate review carried out by the Liberal Democrats, that the NHS had been hit by a further £650mn of "secret cuts". These cuts were made by passing the burden for pension funding from the government to the NHS, reducing the amount of money available to fund front-line services. | The news follows the revelation, in a separate review carried out by the Liberal Democrats, that the NHS had been hit by a further £650mn of "secret cuts". These cuts were made by passing the burden for pension funding from the government to the NHS, reducing the amount of money available to fund front-line services. |
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