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

Private finance plans for NHS buildings | Letters

1 day ago
A picture


Labour MPs are absolutely right to reject Wes Streeting’s plan to use private capital to build neighbourhood health centres (Labour MPs urge Reeves to drop private finance plans for NHS buildings, 21 November).Like a family using a payday loan to buy their home, yes, we’d end up with a building, but we’ll have to sacrifice meals to keep up with the payments.Given Rachel Reeves’s lack of fiscal wiggle room, no one believes that the NHS’s budget will increase year-on-year to keep pace with the combined financial impact of inflation, the growing health needs of our ageing population and possible rising drug prices.So adding a new private finance debt burden to this cocktail will only result in trusts skimping on the only one of those things they have control over: patient care.Research has shown that some trusts pay out more in annual debt repayments for private finance initiatives (PFI) than they do for medicines for patients.

A new briefing by We Own It discusses different private finance models and how they each damage NHS finances.The Streeting PFI model won’t be any different.There are a number of non‑private finance options available to Reeves and Streeting to fund investment in NHS capacity.Reeves has already shown that she can claw back wasted public funds with Covid contracts, so why not with historic PFI deals?Second, they could introduce VAT on private healthcare, a policy supported by Neil Kinnock.This would raise around £2bn.

Streeting and Reeves’s hands are not tied.If they end up resurrecting private finance in the NHS, it will be a political choice.Johnbosco NwogboLead campaigner, We Own It Labour MPs urging the chancellor to drop private finance plans for the NHS overlook the danger that, under the current fiscal rules, health centres won’t get built without private investment.As the National Audit Office found, PFI built projects “on time and on budget”.It also locked in maintenance for years – protecting the NHS from cost‑cutting chancellors.

Ninety hospitals were rebuilt under PFIs in less than a decade, with better value for money.By contrast, the non-PFI new hospital building programme, announced six years ago, will not see most hospitals start being built until 2032.The NHS Lift (local improvement finance trust) programme – which gave a stake to the public sector – built 350 health centres in some of the most deprived communities.We can’t let ideology leave NHS patients waiting in crumbling and overcrowded buildings.Lord HuttonFormer Labour cabinet minister and chair of the Association of Infrastructure Investors in Public Private Partnerships Have an opinion on anything you’ve read in the Guardian today? Please email us your letter and it will be considered for publication in our letters section.

societySee all
A picture

Princess of Wales calls for end to ‘stigma’ around addiction

The Princess of Wales has called for an end to the “stigma” surrounding addictions, saying the experiences of those dependent on drugs, alcohol or gambling are “shaped by fear, shame and judgment”.Catherine, who is a patron of the charity Forward Trust supporting recovering addicts, said more open conversations were needed to bring the issue “out of the shadows” and for society to show “compassion and love” to those affected.“Addiction is not a choice or a personal failing but a complex mental health condition that should be met with empathy and support,” she said in a message marking addiction awareness week, which runs to 30 November.“But still, even now in 2025, people’s experience of addiction is shaped by fear, shame and judgment. This needs to change

about 20 hours ago
A picture

More than 2,000 trafficked children and lone child asylum seekers missing from UK councils’ care

More than 2,000 children who have been trafficked or who arrived in the UK alone to claim asylum disappeared from social services’ care last year, according to freedom of information data shared with the Guardian.The authors of a report, Until Harm Ends, submitted FoI requests to children’s services departments in councils across England, Wales, Scotland and Northern Ireland asking for information about trafficked children and those who arrived alone in the UK and claimed asylum, who then went missing after being taken into care.Data from 135 local authorities revealed that out of 2,335 children identified as having been trafficked or suspected of having been trafficked, 864 (37%) were reported missing.A total of 141 local authorities responded to questions about lone child asylum seekers in their care, who amounted to 11,999 children. Of these, 1,501 (13%) were reported missing

1 day ago
A picture

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

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

1 day ago
A picture

Private finance plans for NHS buildings | Letters

Labour MPs are absolutely right to reject Wes Streeting’s plan to use private capital to build neighbourhood health centres (Labour MPs urge Reeves to drop private finance plans for NHS buildings, 21 November). Like a family using a payday loan to buy their home, yes, we’d end up with a building, but we’ll have to sacrifice meals to keep up with the payments.Given Rachel Reeves’s lack of fiscal wiggle room, no one believes that the NHS’s budget will increase year-on-year to keep pace with the combined financial impact of inflation, the growing health needs of our ageing population and possible rising drug prices. So adding a new private finance debt burden to this cocktail will only result in trusts skimping on the only one of those things they have control over: patient care.Research has shown that some trusts pay out more in annual debt repayments for private finance initiatives (PFI) than they do for medicines for patients

1 day ago
A picture

Budget 2025: how inflation and the two-child benefit cap have increased poverty

“I’ve sat and cried many times, feeling like I’ve let my kids down,” is the heartbreaking description one Kent mother gives of the difficulty she has meeting her family’s needs.With four children still under 13, the family live in a rented flat in the town of Herne Bay on the county’s north coast. She does not come to the door, but her partner passes a handwritten note relaying their meagre existence on benefits as the Guardian joins the local food bank’s morning delivery round.“I have to be careful with electric and gas, and food has to be £1 frozen food,” she writes. “Snacks are a very rare treat

1 day ago
A picture

Bereaved parents face ‘harrowing’ delays for NHS postmorterms

Bereaved parents are enduring “harrowing” delays of more than a year to find out why their child died because the NHS has too few specialist doctors to perform postmortems.The shortage of paediatric and perinatal pathologists is revealed in a report by the Royal College of Pathologists published on Sunday. It warns that the situation is “dire”, services in some parts of the UK have “totally collapsed” and families are paying the price.The NHS has so few of those doctors that in some regions the bodies of babies and children who have died have to be taken elsewhere for examination, for example from Northern Ireland to Alder Hey children’s hospital in Liverpool, the college says.“Our service is in crisis”, said Dr Clair Evans, the chair of the college’s advisory committee that represents pathologists who specialise in the care of under-18s

1 day ago
businessSee all
A picture

Reeves expected to reveal cut in growth forecasts for next five years in budget

about 10 hours ago
A picture

Labour will listen to bosses’ concerns on workers’ rights, says business secretary

about 11 hours ago
A picture

Novo Nordisk shares slide after Ozempic pill fails in Alzheimer’s trials

about 12 hours ago
A picture

‘Friends end up blocking you’: Northwestern Mutual sold college grads a dream job. They left in ruin and debt

about 14 hours ago
A picture

Trump touts cheap groceries ahead of Thanksgiving. The reality is a mixed plate

about 15 hours ago
A picture

Mining giant BHP drops latest bid to buy rival Anglo American

about 17 hours ago