H
society
H
HOYONEWS
HomeBusinessTechnologySportPolitics
Others
  • Food
  • Culture
  • Society
Contact
Home
Business
Technology
Sport
Politics

Food

Culture

Society

Contact
Facebook page
H
HOYONEWS

Company

business
technology
sport
politics
food
culture
society

© 2025 Hoyonews™. All Rights Reserved.
Facebook page

Hospitals must get smaller to stop NHS ‘permacrisis’, thinktank urges

1 day ago
A picture


Hospitals need to become smaller, with fewer beds, to help save the NHS from its “permacrisis”, a thinktank has said.The role hospitals play needs to undergo “a fundamental reinvention” to help them escape the overcrowding that has become widespread over the last decade, according to the thinktank Re:State.Politicians and NHS leaders will have to be prepared to push through a potentially controversial programme of downsizing hospitals for the service to remain viable, it adds.The thinktank – formerly called Reform – argues in a new report that doing so will save the NHS billions of pounds, lead to better care for patients and relieve pressure on overworked staff.Hospitals could shrink in size, shedding thousands of beds, as the result of a massive expansion of care delivered in and near people’s homes.

People will have much less need to go to or stay in hospital if they can access diagnostic tests, outpatient appointments and treatment at home or in community settings, to reflect the changed nature of illness that an ageing population has brought, it says.Rosie Beacon, the author of the report, said: “It’s less about counting beds but about what hospitals do and how they do it.Hospitals can become smaller because you can give people the same standard – and often a better range – of care without them being physically present.That [would produce] lower long-term running costs and a system that’s financially sustainable.“Hospitals shouldn’t be made smaller just for the sake of it but because how and where we deliver secondary care no longer needs to be confined to a hospital bed.

“The natural consequence of a health service that succeeds in reducing hospital footfall, through better prevention and faster treatment, is that hospitals themselves will look smaller and different.Being honest about that isn’t radical; it’s simply facing up to what a modern, preventative NHS requires.”She added: “A smaller hospital footprint is simply the outcome of care becoming faster and more effective.It’s not about cutting services.It’s about delivering them in ways that are faster, more convenient and more financially sustainable.

”The supply of general and acute beds in hospitals in England has fallen from 180,889 in 1987-88 to 100,916 last month, NHS England figures show,Advances in treatment have given patients shorter stays, relieving pressure on beds,But hospitals have to create thousands of extra beds to help them cope with the usual “winter crisis”,Prof Joe Harrison, the chief executive of Milton Keynes university hospital NHS trust, said: “The only route to stabilising the service, improving access and quality of care, and relieving pressure on exhausted staff is radically rethinking what hospitals do and how they do it,”He said the scale of the crisis facing the NHS was so great that bosses “must be prepared to ask the difficult questions and take the difficult decisions” about how services are delivered.

In a foreword to Re:State’s report, the chief executives of NHS Confederation and NHS Providers, which represent England’s 215 health trusts, endorse the case for radical reform of hospitals.While the NHS was “visionary” when it was created in 1948, “that founding vision feels increasingly fragile”, say Matthew Taylor and Daniel Elkeles.“Once revered globally, the NHS has become a service more characterised by waiting than by healing.A model designed in 1945 is not fit for 2025.As the most expensive part of the system, reimagining the hospital must be at the heart of service reforms.

”A Department of Health and Social Care spokesperson said it was already shifting care out of hospitals as part of its “three big shifts” to revive the NHS.“Pioneering neighbourhood health centres will provide easier, more convenient access to a full range of healthcare services right on people’s doorsteps, stopping them from having to make lengthy trips to hospital,” the spokesperson said.“Community diagnostic centres – many of which are open 12 hours a day, seven days a week – let people get tests, checks and scans closer to home, again reducing strain on crowded hospitals.“The hospitals of the future are being built with more single-patient rooms and with careful consideration of demographics, as well as maximising the latest technology for greater efficiency and sustainability.”
cultureSee all
A picture

Kristen Bell and Brian Cox among actors shocked they’re attached to Fox News podcast

The Fox News announcement of a new podcast series on Jesus Christ has turned into a bizarre holiday tale in Hollywood, as several actors attached to massive, 52-episode project claim their recordings date back 15 years and are being released without their prior knowledge.The new audiobook titled The Life of Jesus Christ Podcast, announced on Wednesday as part of a splashy rollout for the network’s new Christian vertical called Fox Faith, purports to guide listeners “through the life, teachings, and miracles of Jesus Christ”, with each episode introduced by Fox & Friends co-host Ainsley Earhardt.The announcement boasted that more than 100 actors had signed on to participate in the project, with a voice cast including Kristen Bell as Mary Magdalene, Sean Astin as Matthew, Neal McDonough as Jesus, Brian Cox as the Voice of God, Malcolm McDowell as Caiaphas, John Rhys-Davies as the narrator and Julia Ormond as Mary.But reps for Bell claim that the actor was blindsided by the announcement, as she had recorded the audio 15 years ago. She only learned that Fox planned to release a podcast with her name attached the day before the announcement, when her team received an invitation to appear on Fox & Friends the following day, her reps told Rolling Stone

3 days ago
A picture

The Guide #218: For gen Zers like me, YouTube isn’t an app or a website – it’s the backdrop to our waking lives

Barely a month goes by without more news of streaming sites overtaking traditional, terrestrial TV. Predominant among those sits YouTube, with more than 2.5 billion monthly viewers. For people my age – a sprightly 28 – and younger, YouTube is less of an app or website than our answer to radio: the ever-present background hum of modern life. While my mum might leave Radio 4 wittering or BBC News flickering in the corner as she potters about the house, I’ve got a video essay about Japan’s unique approach to urban planning playing on my phone

3 days ago
A picture

Stephen Colbert on Trump v Epstein files: ‘Fighting tooth and cankle’

Late-night hosts reacted to Donald Trump signing a bill to release the Epstein files while still trying to distract from them.Stephen Colbert celebrated the impending release of all files related to the late pedophile Jeffrey Epstein. “After months of Trump fighting tooth and cankle to hold back the Republican party from doing the right thing, he just went ahead and gave up and signed the bill to release the Epstein files,” the Late Show host explained a day after Congress voted near unanimously to compel the justice department to make the files public within 30 days.“Even though Trump told Republicans to all vote for this, he was clearly furious that they did,” Colbert continued. Trump signed the bill after the White House issued a so-called photo lid, which shut down any on-camera opportunities

3 days ago
A picture

After 10 years talking to knights, squires and wizards, I understand why ren fairs are booming

“I dunno what to tell ya, mate,” a young knight once told me through his helm’s lifted visor. “Gettin’ shield bashed just feels good.”For the knaves among thee, a “shield bash” is what it sounds like: to bash, or be bashed, with a shield. It’s simple and to the point, like a mace to the face or an arrow to the knee. Witnessing a shield bash, you understand the “haha yesss” that the basher must feel upon bashing, just as you empathetically presume a long “oh noooooo” on behalf of the bashee

3 days ago
A picture

Seth Meyers on Epstein files: ‘It’s obvious why Trump fought so hard to stop this bill from passing’

Late-night hosts reacted to the congressional vote sending the bill to release all files related to late pedophile Jeffrey Epstein to the desk of his former friend Donald Trump.It was a tough Tuesday for Trump, who lost his months-long battle to stop the release of the Epstein files on Tuesday after Congress passed a bill forcing the justice department publish them. “So now Trump is doing a 180,” said Seth Meyers on Wednesday’s Late Night.“He says he’ll sign the bill that forces him to release the files he could’ve released on his own but wouldn’t, thus requiring a bill to force him to do the thing he didn’t want to do that he’ll now be forced to do because of the bill he was against that he will now sign.”“It’s obvious why Trump fought so hard to stop this bill from passing,” Meyers later added

4 days ago
A picture

My cultural awakening: I moved across the world after watching a Billy Connolly documentary

I was 23 and thought I had found my path in life. I’d always wanted to work with animals, and I had just landed a job as a vet nurse in Melbourne. I was still learning the ropes, but I imagined I would stay there for years, building a life around the work. Then, five months in, the vet called me into his office and told me it wasn’t working out. “It’s not you,” he said, “I just really hate training people

5 days ago
trendingSee all
A picture

European defence company shares fall amid Ukraine peace talk hopes; Novo Nordisk reports Ozempic fails to help with Alzheimer’s – as it happened

about 9 hours ago
A picture

More than 650 jobs at risk as scrap metals giant files for liquidation

about 9 hours ago
A picture

Can’t tech a joke: AI does not understand puns, study finds

about 18 hours ago
A picture

Civil liberties groups call for inquiry into UK data protection watchdog

about 20 hours ago
A picture

England know how to win under Borthwick – now to handle great expectations | Gerard Meagher

about 8 hours ago
A picture

Budget may deliver result desired from racing’s ‘Axe the Tax’ campaign

about 8 hours ago