Western Daily Press

Hospitals programme marred as costs soar

- ELLA PICKOVER

THE Government’s flagship programme to build 40 new hospitals has been marred by “delay, indecision and soaring costs”, health leaders have warned.

NHS Providers, which represents NHS trusts, said hospitals are footing the bill for delays to the project.

In 2020, the Government announced its New Hospital Programme (NHP) which pledged to build 40 hospitals by 2030.

In May 2023, ministers committed to prioritisi­ng rebuilding facilities that included reinforced autoclaved aerated concrete (Raac).

As a result, ministers said that some of the projects, which can include anything from a whole new hospital to a major refurbishm­ent and alteration of an existing hospital, will now be completed after the expected completion date of 2030.

But NHS Providers said that millions of pounds every month are being “drained from scarce NHS funds” due to delays, with some forking out over £1 million a month.

One hospital boss involved in the initiative told NHS Providers: “Further delays are only going to introduce further patient harm, disappoint our colleagues and increase costs to the taxpayer.”

Another said: “Our teams are coming in, day in day out to infrastruc­ture that is not fit for purpose. We don’t have the facilities to treat patients in the way that any of us aspire to.”

One leader told NHS Providers: “In the past three years, we’ve seen a 25% increase in costs. That’s £200 million more today than it would have cost three years ago.”

Sir Julian Hartley, chief executive of NHS Providers, said: “Trust leaders and local people want to see the promise of ‘new hospitals’ honoured. They know these projects can transform services for patients and staff. While there has been some welcome progress, the bigger picture is one of delay, indecision and soaring costs which the NHS, taxpayers and patients can ill afford. Trusts urgently need clarity from the Government on funding and next steps.

“But this is one part of a much bigger problem about the scale of underinves­tment across the NHS estate. More than 100 trusts applied to join the NHP and the NHS repairs bill is now at a staggering £11.6 billion, much of it high risk. We cannot afford to let this problem get worse.

“As we head towards a general election, trust leaders want a castiron commitment from all political parties to an NHS infrastruc­ture programme that meets the needs of hospitals, mental health, community and ambulance services.”

Commenting, Patricia Marquis, executive director for the Royal College of Nursing in England, said: “Nursing staff report risks to their own safety and their patients from working in outdated buildings.

“They want to deliver care in safe and modern facilities, not be put under strain by a lack of capacity or crumbling care settings.”

The bigger picture is one of delay, indecision and soaring costs SIR JULIAN HARTLEY

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