Re: Brexit Bounces too
Posted: Sun Sep 08 2019 10:52pm
Poor Boris
He’s Brexit won’t stay hard and he can’t get an election
He’s Brexit won’t stay hard and he can’t get an election
LOL.kevinchess1 wrote: ↑Sun Sep 08 2019 10:52pmPoor Boris
He’s Brexit won’t stay hard and he can’t get an election
could do with some help from the Greenskevinchess1 wrote: ↑Sun Sep 08 2019 10:52pmPoor Boris
He’s Brexit won’t stay hard and he can’t get an election
I had heard that a large percentage of the NHS budget goes to pay for the ever increasing insurance premiums to cover for the ever increasing claims for malpractice and injury claims following disastrous operations and mis-diagnosis...!?!expressman33 wrote: ↑Fri Sep 06 2019 6:23pmThe problem is no matter how much extra funding the NHS gets , it will never be enough.Chadwick wrote: ↑Fri Sep 06 2019 2:56pmThe problem with the "£350m for the NHS" is not that it won't be delivered until after we leave.expressman33 wrote: ↑Thu Sep 05 2019 5:53pm
We haven't left the EU yet and at this rate we never will
The problem is that it was a total fabrication: there is no £350m. It won't magically appear after Brexit.
already promised Year-by-year funding increases
2019-20 - 3.6%
2020 - 21 - 3.6%
2021-22 - 3.1%
2022-23 - 3.1%
2023-24 - 3.4%
All figures are above inflation
I had heard that Her Majesty the Queen wanted to marry me.Boro Boy wrote: ↑Mon Sep 09 2019 1:32pmI had heard that a large percentage of the NHS budget goes to pay for the ever increasing insurance premiums to cover for the ever increasing claims for malpractice and injury claims following disastrous operations and mis-diagnosis...!?!expressman33 wrote: ↑Fri Sep 06 2019 6:23pmThe problem is no matter how much extra funding the NHS gets , it will never be enough.
already promised Year-by-year funding increases
2019-20 - 3.6%
2020 - 21 - 3.6%
2021-22 - 3.1%
2022-23 - 3.1%
2023-24 - 3.4%
All figures are above inflation
According to a House of Commons briefing paper, in 2016/17, NHS England held a budget of £107 billion. Assuming all those claim payments go against that budget, that's 1.5% of the budget.pabenny wrote: ↑Mon Sep 09 2019 2:24pmPublic accounts committee (of the Houses of Parliament)
https://www.parliament.uk/business/comm ... sts-17-19/
Cost to NHS trusts of clinical negligence claims in 2016/17 was £1.6bn. The report states that 10,600 claims were registered (not all will necessarily be successful). The number doubled over the previous 10 years and the amount per incident also doubled over the same period. Most of the cost of settlement (83%) relates to maternity, and the report attributes the growth in cost to the greater life expectancy of infants injured during childbirth.
The NHS confederation report 10.1m operations in 2015/19. So that's less than 0.1% of operations result in a negligence claim.
Either way a lot of money and increasing it seems on an annual basis...Chadwick wrote: ↑Mon Sep 09 2019 2:48pmAccording to a House of Commons briefing paper, in 2016/17, NHS England held a budget of £107 billion. Assuming all those claim payments go against that budget, that's 1.5% of the budget.pabenny wrote: ↑Mon Sep 09 2019 2:24pmPublic accounts committee (of the Houses of Parliament)
https://www.parliament.uk/business/comm ... sts-17-19/
Cost to NHS trusts of clinical negligence claims in 2016/17 was £1.6bn. The report states that 10,600 claims were registered (not all will necessarily be successful). The number doubled over the previous 10 years and the amount per incident also doubled over the same period. Most of the cost of settlement (83%) relates to maternity, and the report attributes the growth in cost to the greater life expectancy of infants injured during childbirth.
The NHS confederation report 10.1m operations in 2015/19. So that's less than 0.1% of operations result in a negligence claim.
I haven't done full due diligence to make sure I'm using the right budget figure. Higher up on the same page it says "In 2016/17, the figure was over ten times that amount: £144.3bn", which makes the expenditure on claims 1.1%.