Department must assist NHS trusts to attain foundation status
Summary
The Department of Health (DH) must advise a number of struggling National Health Service (NHS) trusts on how to meet standards required to become self-governing foundation trusts by 2014, the National Audit Office reports.
The report 'Achievement of Foundation Trust Status by NHS Hospital Trusts' (HC 1516) details that many NHS trusts are facing a range of financial, quality and governance issues in meeting foundation trust standards and DH and the NHS will now have to decide how they will deal with those facing the most severe problems.
The processes DH has put in place to help NHS trusts achieve foundation status have brought matters to a head, by highlighting the challenges many trusts face in proving their long term viability.
At least 20 trusts face such substantial problems that they are not financially or clinically viable in their current form: these problems are often deep-seated and long-standing.
Size and location can cause problems, including a mismatch between hospital capacity and local demand for services from commissioners.
In some cases DH will need to be involved in decisions about and support for reconfigurations of local hospital services. Other trusts may have less severe problems, but will still have to improve their financial and, in some cases, clinical performance if they are to be sustainable in the long term and become foundation trusts.
The most common challenges are financial - an initial review of 22 trusts with major PFI schemes has identified up to six trusts for which the scale of debt repayments, together with other financial problems, means that they are not currently viable.
Trusts also face a great challenge in making year-on-year cost savings of at least 4%.
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