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Home » Fit for the Future Health and Social Care Secretary’s statement
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Fit for the Future Health and Social Care Secretary’s statement

By uk-times.com3 July 2025No Comments8 Mins Read
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Thank you, Madam Deputy Speaker.

With your permission, I will make a statement to the House on ‘Fit for the Future’ – the Government’s 10 Year Health Plan for England.

There are moments in our national story when our choices define who we are.

In 1948, the Attlee Government made a choice founded on fairness that everyone in our country deserves to receive the care you need, not just the care you can afford. 

It enshrined in law and in the service itself, our collective conviction that healthcare is not a privilege to be bought and sold, but a right to be cherished and protected.

And now it falls to our generation to make the same choice to rebuild our National Health Service, and protect in this century what Attlee’s government built for the last.

That is the driving mission of our Ten-Year Plan.

In September, Lord Darzi provided the diagnosis The NHS was broken [political content redacted].

In the past year, Labour has put the NHS on the road to recovery.

  • We promised 2 million extra appointments, and we’ve delivered more than 4 million.
  • We promised 1,000 new GPs on the frontline. We’ve recruited 1,900.
  • We’ve taken almost a quarter of a million off waiting lists, cutting waiting lists to their lowest level in two years.

And we have launched an independent commission, chaired by Baroness Casey, to build a national consensus around a new national care service to meet the needs of older and disabled people into the 21st century.

Today, the Prime Minister has set out our prescription to get the NHS back on its feet and make it fit for the future.

Our Plan will deliver three big shifts

First, from hospital to community.

We will turn our National Health Service into a Neighbourhood Health Service. The principle is simple Care should happen as locally as it can digitally by default, in a patient’s home if possible, in a neighbourhood health centre when needed, in a hospital if necessary.

We’ll put Neighbourhood Health Centres in every community, so you can see a GP, nurse, physio, care worker, therapist, get a test, scan, or treatment for minor injuries, all under one roof. The NHS will be organised around patients, rather than patients having to organise their lives around the NHS.

It will be easier and faster to see a GP. We will train thousands more, end the 8am scramble, provide same-day consultations, and bring back the family doctor.

If you are someone with multiple conditions and complex needs, the NHS will co-create a personal care plan, so your care is done with you, not to you.

Pharmacy will play an expanded role in the Neighbourhood Health Service. They will manage long-term conditions; treat conditions like obesity and high blood pressure; screen for disease and vaccinate against it.

And we will reform the dental contract, to get more dentists doing NHS work, rebuilding NHS dentistry.

Over the course of this Plan, the majority of the 135 million outpatient appointments done each year will be moved out of hospitals. The funding will follow, so a greater share of NHS investment is spent in primary and community care.

Second, from analogue to digital.

No longer will NHS staff have to enter seven passwords to login to their computers, or spend hours writing notes and entering data. Our Plan will liberate frontline staff from the parts of the job they hate, so they can focus on the job they love – caring for patients.

For the first time ever, patients will be given real control over a single, secure and authoritative account of their data. The single patient record will mean NHS staff can see your medical records and know your medical history, so they can provide you with the best possible care.

Wearable technology will feed in real-time health data, so patients’ health can be monitored while they stay in the comfort of their own home, with clinicians reaching out at the first signs of deterioration.

The NHS App will become the front door to the health service, delivering power to the patient. You will be able to

  • Book and rearrange appointments for you, your children, or a loved one you care for
  • Get instant advice from an AI doctor in your pocket
  • Leave feedback on your care, and see what feedback other patients have left
  • Choose where you’re treated
  • Book appointments in urgent care, so you don’t wait for hours
  • And refer yourself to a specialist where clinically appropriate

And of course, patients can already do these things, but only if they can afford private healthcare. With Labour’s plan, every patient will receive a first-class service, whatever their background and whatever they earn.

Third, from sickness to prevention.

Working with the food industry, we will make the healthy choice the easy choice to cut calories.

We will rollout obesity jabs on the NHS.

We’ll get Britain moving, with our new NHS Points scheme.

We’ll update school food standards so kids are fed healthy, nutritious meals.

And we will tackle the mental health crisis, with support in every school to catch problems early, 24/7 support with virtual therapists for moderate need, and dedicated emergency departments for patients for when they reach crisis point

Madam Deputy Speaker, the science is on our side. The revolution in artificial intelligence, machine learning and big data offers a golden opportunity to deliver better care at better value.

New innovator passports and reform of NICE and the MHRA will see medicines and technology rapidly adopted.

Robotic surgery will become the norm in certain procedures, so patients recover from surgery at home rather than in hospital beds.

And the NHS will usher in a new age of medicine, leapfrogging disease so we are predicting and preventing it, rather than just diagnosing and treating. It is therefore the ambition of this plan to provide a genomic test for every newborn baby by 2035.

Thanks to my Right Honourable Friend, the Chancellor, this plan is backed by an extra £29 billion a year by the end of the Spending Review period, and the biggest capital investment in the history of the NHS.

Of course, alongside that investment, comes reform. This plan slashes unnecessary bureaucracy, and devolves power and resource to the frontline.

It abolishes more than 200 bodies, because listening to patients, guaranteeing safety, and protecting whistleblowers is core business for the NHS, and should never have been outsourced.

It commits to publishing league tables to rank providers.

We will intervene in failing providers to turn them around, and reinvent the foundation trust model in a new system of earned autonomy.

Pay will be tied to performance, so excellence is recognised, and failure has consequences.

Tariffs will be reduced to boost productivity.

Block contracts will end, with funding tied to outcomes.

The plan gives power to the patient, so hospitals are financially rewarded for a better service.

It closes health inequalities by investing more in working class communities.

And it establishes a National Investigation into maternity and neonatal services – to deliver the truth, justice, and improvement that bereaved families deserve.

Madam Deputy Speaker, I am sometimes told that NHS staff are resistant to change. On the contrary, they’re crying out for it. They suffer the moral injury of seeing their patients treated in unfit conditions. And they’re the ones driving innovation on the frontline, and so their fingerprints are all over this Plan.

The public are desperate for change, too. Each of us has our own story about the NHS and the difference it has made to our own lives. And we also know the consequences of failure. That is why we cannot afford to fail.

To succeed, we need to defeat the cynicism that says that says ‘nothing ever changes’. 

We know the change in our Plan is possible because it’s already happening. We have toured the length and breadth of the country and scouted the world for the best examples of reform. If Australia can effectively serve communities living in the outback, we can surely meet the needs of rural England. If community health teams can go door to door to prevent illness in Brazil, we can certainly do the same in Bradford.

We know we can build the Neighbourhood Health Service, because teams in Cornwall, Camden, Northumbria, and Stratford – where I was with the Prime Minister and Chancellor this morning – are already showing us how to do it. 

So, we will take the best of the NHS to the rest of the NHS. And we will apply the best examples of innovation from around the world, to benefit people here at home.

Above all else, we will give power to the patient. This Plan fulfils Nye Bevan’s commitment in 1948 to put a megaphone to the mouth of every patient. And it will restore the founding promise of the NHS, to be there for us when we need it.

[Political content redacted]

It falls to us to make sure that the NHS not only survives, but thrives. And we will not let our country down.

And of course, if we succeed, we will be able to say with pride that will echo down the decades of the 21st century, that we were the generation that built an NHS fit for the future and a fairer Britain, where everyone lives well for longer.

[I commend this statement to the House.]

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