With polls opening in 24 hours, Labour is promising to breathe life back into the NHS after years of the Conservatives starving it of funds, running down our health workers and opening the door to full-scale privatisation.
Since Theresa May became Prime Minister in 2016, almost two million people have waited longer than four hours in A&E, almost 450,000 have waited longer than four hours on trolleys and nearly 70,000 more people on waiting lists. The Conservatives have no plan to support our NHS, with a manifesto that fails to provide any additional funding for the NHS.
If the Conservatives have five more years running our NHS, private provision of healthcare in our NHS will balloon to £18.4 billion by 2021/22.
Labour will restore the NHS to be the envy of the world by:
Jeremy Corbyn, Leader of the Labour Party said:
“The Conservatives have spent the last seven years running down our NHS, our proudest national institution. Our NHS cannot afford five more years of underfunding, understaffing and privatisation.
“Labour will give our NHS the resources it needs to deliver the best possible care for patients, and end the Conservatives’ attacks on our hardworking health workers, who care for us all.
“The Conservatives have already cut our NHS, our schools, our police and our social care services - and their manifesto is a plan for five more years of cuts to services according to the IFS.
“We have just 24 hours to change course and save our NHS, schools, social care and police services by electing a Labour government that will invest to transform Britain for the many, not the few.”
ENDS
Notes to Editors
The Conservatives have not given the NHS the money it needs
• In their 2015 manifesto the Tories said they would give the NHS £8 billion by 2020.
“Simon Stevens was asked to come forward with
a five year plan for the NHS. He did that, so that’s been generated by the NHS
itself. He said that it needed £8bn extra – the government has not just given
him £8bn extra, we’ve given him £10bn extra.” Theresa May, Interview with
Manchester Evening News, 17 October 2016,
http://www.manchestereveningnews.co.uk/news/greater-manchester-news/theresa-came-manchester-asked-three-12039565
“I think it would be stretching it to say
that the NHS has got more than it has asked for.” Simon Stevens,
Public Accounts Committee, Oral evidence: Financial Sustainability of the NHS,
11 January 2017,
http://data.parliament.uk/writtenevidence/committeeevidence.svc/evidencedocument/public-accounts-committee/the-financial-sustainability-of-the-nhs/oral/45122.html
“If the spending review period is considered—2015–16 to 2020–21—that increase is £4.5 billion.”
House of Commons, Health Select Committee
Report, Impact of the Spending Review on health and
social care, 19 July 2016 https://www.publications.parliament.uk/pa/cm201617/cmselect/cmhealth/139/13904.htm#_idTextAnchor008
5 more years of privatisation
(Source: Iacobucci G (2014). A third of NHS contracts awarded since health act have gone to private sector, BMA investigation shows. BMJ 2014;349:g7606)
(Sources: House of Lords Answer to PQ 5389, 11 March 2015; DH Annual Report and Accounts, Table 10, p 40, 21 July 2016)
5 more years of cuts
“The NHS needs an average of 1.2 per cent to just keep pace with age-adjusted population growth, the Tories plans means the NHS will get this, but nothing more.”
IFS, General Election 2017: IFS manifesto analysis, 26 May 2017
“A real increase of £8 billion over the next five years would extend what is easily the lowest period of spending increases in NHS history to 12 years”
IFS, General Election 2017: IFS manifesto analysis, 26 May 2017
“Conservative plans for NHS spending look very tight indeed and may well be undeliverable.”
Institute for Fiscal Studies, Press Release, 26 May 2017 - https://www.ifs.org.uk/publications/9259
“The budget for NHS England is projected to rise by more than £8 billion in real terms between 2015/16 and 2020/21, technically meeting the manifesto commitment to fund the implementation of the NHS five year forward view. However, the budget for the Department of Health – the definition used by previous governments to measure health spending – will increase by only £4.6 billion over this period. Cuts in areas of health spending that have not been protected are having an impact on frontline care.”
The King’s Fund, 12 May 2017, https://www.kingsfund.org.uk/publications/articles/government-pledge-nhs-funding
Funding
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