Poorest in England receive worse quality of NHS care

New analysis finds that people living in the most deprived areas of England experience a worse quality of NHS care and poorer health outcomes than people living in the least deprived areas.

The research, undertaken by QualityWatch, a joint Nuffield Trust and Health Foundation programme, has looked at 23 measures of healthcare quality to see how these are affected by deprivation. In every single indicator looked at, care is worse for people experiencing the greatest deprivation. These include spending longer in A&E and having a worse experience of making a GP appointment.

Of further worry, the researchers found that for 11 out of the 23 measures, the inequality gap was widening. In general, indicators where the quality of care has got worse over time, the inequality gap between the most and least deprived has widened too.

For example, there was almost no difference in the proportion of people missing the four-hour A&E target in the most deprived areas versus least deprived in 2014/5. However, in 2017/18 a gap emerged where 14.3 per cent of people from the most deprived areas of England who attended A&E were not seen within the target compared to 12.8 per cent of people from the least deprived areas.

Additionally, in 2017/18, there were 394 emergency admissions for pressure sores per 100,000 people from the most deprived areas, compared to 134 per 100,000 people from the least deprived areas – almost three times as many. In 2008/09, this was just more than twice as many.

Sarah Scobie, the Nuffield Trust’s deputy director of Research, said: “These findings show some concerning trends about the knock-on effect an overstretched NHS is having on the people in England who often need it the most. My worry is that continued pressure on the NHS is only going to exacerbate inequalities, despite the very best of intentions from staff to provide fair and equal care. The NHS Long Term Plan, which the new government is embracing, makes reducing inequalities a priority. This is absolutely right, but achieving this will require quite a turnaround.”

Ruth Thorlby, Health Foundation assistant director of policy, added: “Poverty is bad for your health, and people in the poorest parts of England face a vicious cycle. Poor living conditions, low quality work, and underfunded local services lead to worse health. These findings show that added to this, those in the most deprived areas are routinely experiencing longer waits in A&E, lower satisfaction and more potentially avoidable hospital admissions. Relieving growing pressure on the NHS must be part of the solution, but as important for the new government is investing in housing, education and good work to keep people healthy in the first place.”

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This story was first published in digitalhealth.net

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