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Winter pressure 'busts NHS budget' | |
(35 minutes later) | |
Winter pressures have caused the NHS to overspend as hospitals and other services have struggled to keep up with demand in England, finance chiefs say. | |
A deficit of nearly £900m was racked up by NHS trusts in the first nine months of the 2016-17 financial year. | |
It comes despite the health service being given extra money to help it get on top of its finances after the record £2.45bn overspend in 2015-16. | It comes despite the health service being given extra money to help it get on top of its finances after the record £2.45bn overspend in 2015-16. |
Hospitals were seeing more patients than budgeted for, they reported. | |
They also said problems discharging patients because of a lack of community services had cost them, said the regulator, NHS Improvement. | |
The figures for April to December cover ambulances, mental health units and community services as well as hospitals - although most of the deficit has been accrued by the latter. | |
Between them they account for £80bn of fund, about two-thirds of the health budget, because spending on GPs, training, drugs and public health are accounted for separately. | |
NHS Improvement, which released the accounts, said it had been a "challenging winter". | NHS Improvement, which released the accounts, said it had been a "challenging winter". |
Waiting times have reached their worst-ever levels in A&E, while nine out of 10 hospitals have spent the winter months overcrowded with unsafe numbers of patients on wards. | |
NHS Improvement chief executive Jim Mackey said it was proving to be "extremely challenging times". | |
But the regulator predicted the deficit could be cut slightly by the end of the financial year in April to between £750m and £850m - but still above the £580m figure suggested earlier in the year. | |
Some 135 out of 238 trusts had racked up a deficit in the nine months between April and December. | Some 135 out of 238 trusts had racked up a deficit in the nine months between April and December. |
The total deficit when taking into account surpluses was £886m - less than half the figure at this point last year. | |
But the improvement has only been achieved because of a special one-off £1.8bn fund this year to help hospitals plug the gap. | But the improvement has only been achieved because of a special one-off £1.8bn fund this year to help hospitals plug the gap. |
Chris Hopson, chief executive of NHS Providers, which represents trusts, described the latest figures as worrying. | Chris Hopson, chief executive of NHS Providers, which represents trusts, described the latest figures as worrying. |
He said trusts were expected to operate with a "wafer-thin" margin for error. | He said trusts were expected to operate with a "wafer-thin" margin for error. |
"We shouldn't kid ourselves. The NHS's underlying financial position is not sustainable," he added. | "We shouldn't kid ourselves. The NHS's underlying financial position is not sustainable," he added. |
The NHS is in the middle of the tightest financial settlement since it was created. Since 2010 the budget has been rising by a little more than 1% on average compared to more than 4% during the rest of its history. | |
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