The NHS financing could be associated with the patient’s feedback as part of new plans, with poorly efficient services that have been punished with less money.
As part of the “10 -year health plan”, which is to be unveiled next week, a new system will be tested in which the patients are asked to assess the service they receive – and if they believe that it should receive a funding boost or not.
It is first introduced for services that have a success story about a very bad performance and where there are indications that patients are “not heard,” said the government.
This creates a “powerful incentive for services to hear feedback and improve the experience of the patients,” she added.
Sky News understands that it will not mean bonuses or increase for the best -performing employees.
Nhs The payment mechanisms are also reformed in order to reward services that keep patients away as part of a new “payments” initiative and the further change plan of the government outside the hospital.
In conversation with The Times, the managing director of the NHS conference Matthew Taylor expressed concerns about the process.
He told the newspaper: “The patient experience is determined with far more than individual interaction with the clinician. If this is not very carefully designed and evaluated, there is a risk that providers could be punished for more systemic problems, such as restrictions on personnel management or the limitation that go beyond their immediate control.”
He said that NHS leaders absolutely want to “understand more about the proposal” because elements were “worrying”.
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In the field of announcements in the 10 -year health schedule, the government said that 201 corpses that are responsible for monitoring and running parts of the NHS in England – known as Quangos – are scrapped.
This includes Healthwatch England, which was set up in 2012 to be founded on behalf of NHS and Social Care patients, the National Guardian’s Office, which was founded in 2015 to support NHS Whistleblower and the security examinations for health services (HSSIB).
The head of the Royal College of Nursing described the move as “so insecure for patients at the moment”.
Professor Nicola Ranger said: “Today we know in hospitals in the NHS that a nurse can look after 10, 15 or more patients. It is not certain. It is not effective. And it is not acceptable.
“In order for these proposed changes to be effective, the government has to insert the real problem, the personnel crisis of our stations and not only people into new roles. The protection of the patients must be a priority and not just a drive for efficiency.”
Elsewhere, the new head of NHS England Sir Jim Mackey said that important parts of the NHS were “built to keep the public away because it is an inconvenience”.
“We made it really difficult and we were probably all at the end,” he told the Daily Telegraph.
“The community -resistant only works nine to five or they are busy doing other things; the GP exercise scratch every morning.”