UK Prime Minister Keir Starmer has announced plans to take closer control of England’s National Health Service (NHS) as he vowed to streamline the British state.
Starmer said he would end the NHS England body to “cut bureaucracy” and bring management of the almost 80-year-old health system “back into democratic control”.
According to the government, the move would cut red tape and save “hundreds of millions of pounds a year” that would be “reinvested in frontline services”.
“That money could and should be spent on nurses, doctors, operations, GP appointments,” Starmer said during a visit in northeast England.
The previous Conservative-led administration established NHS England in 2013 as a so-called arms-length body to deliver health services.
But Starmer argued that decisions involving billions of pounds of taxpayer money should not be taken by such a body.
NHS England is financed by the government but runs itself.
It employs around 13,500 staff members—three times more than the Department of Health, according to the government.
Starmer said scrapping it would end “duplication”.
The NHS is revered by most Britons but has been on its knees for years due to underinvestment and poor morale, which has led to significant strike action.
Starmer, elected last July, has vowed to cut waiting times for operations and create more doctors’ appointments.
His NHS announcement forms part of a wider plan to make the British state “more agile”.
Starmer says reducing the size of Britain’s half a million-strong civil service and increasing the use of artificial intelligence can save the government £45 billion ($58.3 billion) a year.
Writing in The Daily Telegraph on Thursday, he called Britain’s public service “overcautious” and “flabby”.
AFP
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