Sustainability And Transformation Plan
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In England, a sustainability and transformation plan (STP) is a non-statutory requirement which promotes integrated provision of healthcare, including purchasing and commissioning, within each geographical area of the
National Health Service The National Health Service (NHS) is the term for the publicly funded health care, publicly funded healthcare systems of the United Kingdom: the National Health Service (England), NHS Scotland, NHS Wales, and Health and Social Care (Northern ...
. The plans were introduced in 2016 but by 2018 had been overtaken by progress towards integrated care systems.


Establishment

In March 2016,
NHS England NHS England, formally the NHS Commissioning Board for England, is an executive non-departmental public body of the Department of Health and Social Care. It oversees the budget, planning, delivery and day-to-day operation of the commissioning si ...
divided the geographical areas of
England England is a Countries of the United Kingdom, country that is part of the United Kingdom. It is located on the island of Great Britain, of which it covers about 62%, and List of islands of England, more than 100 smaller adjacent islands. It ...
into 44 sustainability and transformation plan areas (or footprints) with populations between 300,000 and 3 million, which would implement the Five Year Forward View. These areas were locally agreed between
NHS trust An NHS trust is an organisational unit within the National Health Services of England and Wales, generally serving either a geographical area or a specialised function (such as an ambulance service). In any particular location there may be several ...
s, local authorities and
clinical commissioning group Clinical commissioning groups (CCGs) were National Health Service (England), National Health Service (NHS) organisations set up by the Health and Social Care Act 2012 to replace Strategic health authority, strategic health authorities and NHS pr ...
s. A leader was appointed for each area, to be responsible for the implementation of the plans which are to be agreed by the component organisations. They were to "work across organisational boundaries to help build a consensus for transformation and the practical steps to deliver it".


Evolution

During 2017 the use of the acronym STP shifted, so that it was used to signify sustainability and transformation partnerships. In February 2018 it was announced that these organisations were in future to be called integrated care systems, and that all 44 sustainability and transformation plans would be expected to progress in this direction. The ten pioneer systems were described as nascent and fragile by the
Health Select Committee The Health and Social Care Select Committee (abbreviated to HSC, HSCC and HSCSC) is a Departmental Select Committee of the British House of Commons, the lower house of the United Kingdom Parliament. Its remit is to examine the policy, administ ...
in May 2018. By December 2020 only 13 sustainability and transformation partnerships still existed, with 29 transformed into integrated care systems.


Areas

The geographical configuration differs in some respects from previous NHS arrangements – regional hospital boards, regional health authorities and strategic health authorities – because the configurations have been locally agreed, rather than imposed from the centre. When established in 2016, there were 44 STPs which varied considerably in size, the largest having more than ten times greater population than the smallest. By 2019 there were 41, after three STPs in the North East merged. , the seven NHS England regions have 42 STPs which are at varying stages of progression into integrated care systems.


North East and Yorkshire

* South Yorkshire and Bassetlaw STP * Humber, Coast and Vale STP * West Yorkshire and Harrogate (Health & Care Partnership) STP * Cumbria and North East STP


North West

* Cheshire and Merseyside STP * Greater Manchester Health and Social Care Partnership * Healthier Lancashire and South Cumbria


Midlands

* Joined Up Care Derbyshire STP * Staffordshire and Stoke-on-Trent STP * Shropshire and Telford and Wrekin STP * Nottingham and Nottinghamshire Health and Care STP * Herefordshire and Worcestershire STP * Birmingham and Solihull STP * The Black Country and West Birmingham STP * Coventry and Warwickshire STP * Lincolnshire STP * Leicester, Leicestershire and Rutland STP * Northamptonshire STP


East of England

* Mid and South Essex STP * Bedfordshire, Luton and Milton Keynes STP * Suffolk and North East Essex STP * Hertfordshire and West Essex STP * Norfolk and Waveney Health & Care Partnership (STP) * Cambridgeshire and Peterborough STP


London

* Our Healthier South East London STP * East London Health & Care Partnership (STP) * North London Partners in Health & Care (STP) * North West London Health & Care Partnership (STP) * South West London Health & Care Partnership (STP)


South East

* Frimley Health & Care ICS (STP) * Hampshire and the Isle of Wight STP * Buckinghamshire, Oxfordshire and Berkshire West STP * Kent and Medway STP * Sussex and East Surrey STP * Surrey Heartlands Health & Care Partnership (STP)


South West

* Devon STP * Somerset STP * Cornwall and the Isles of Scilly Health & Social Care Partnership (STP) * Dorset STP * Bath and North East Somerset, Swindon and Wiltshire STP * Gloucestershire STP * Bristol, North Somerset and South Gloucestershire STP


Staffing

, three of the leaders are from local government: Sir Howard Bernstein, chief executive of
Manchester City Council Manchester City Council is the Local government in England, local authority for the City status in the United Kingdom, city of Manchester in Greater Manchester, England. Manchester has had an elected local authority since 1838, which has been re ...
; David Pearson, director of adult social care at
Nottingham City Council Nottingham City Council is the local authority for the city of Nottingham, in the ceremonial county of Nottinghamshire in the East Midlands region of England. Nottingham has had a council from medieval times, which has been reformed on numerous ...
; and Mark Rogers, chief executive of
Birmingham City Council Birmingham City Council is the local authority for the city of Birmingham in the West Midlands, England. Birmingham has had an elected local authority since 1838, which has been reformed several times. Since 1974 the council has been a metropo ...
and president of the Society of Local Authority Chief Executives and Senior Managers. The remainder are NHS managers.


Finance

The NHS planning guidance for 2016–17 stated: "For many years now, the NHS has emphasised an organisational separation and autonomy that doesn’t make sense to staff or the patients and communities they serve… System leadership is needed." It also suggested that the financial problems of individual organisations are no longer critical: "what is important is the financial situation of the organisations in each area considered together". Each area was required to produce a Sustainability and Transformation Plan by end of June 2016. In February 2017 the National Audit Office produced a report suggesting that plans to save millions of pounds "may be optimistic", that there was poor oversight of the various initiatives and that progress with integration plans had been slower and less successful than planned. £5.3 billion spent through the Better Care Fund in 2015/16 had not delivered value for money. Furthermore, there was "no compelling evidence" to suggest that integration would lead to financial savings or less use of acute hospitals. £325 million capital funding for the strongest plans was announced in March 2017 but Sir Robert Naylor concluded that at least £10 billion would be needed to deliver proposed plans and make NHS facilities fit for purpose. His review suggested that £6 billion could be raised by selling NHS land and buildings.


Development

Simon Stevens described the progress made in December 2016, saying that the most advanced areas were "capable of combining the purchaser and provider, the commissioning and provider function, a la Frimley Health”. In some cases he expected a "governance partnership of the relevant statutory bodies" which in some cases might become integrated organisations. But in some areas there were only proposals, not yet progressed into plans. He proposed to give the most advanced money and authority to progress their plans. NHS England would organise national support programmes, particularly for “primary care provider development”, support urgent and emergency care systems, rather than to individual organisations, and set up clinical standardisation and productivity initiatives under professors Timothy Briggs and Tim Evans. Plans released in March 2017 propose at that all plans should evolve into accountable care systems with "clear collective responsibility for resources and population health" and some control over devolved funding for mental health, cancer and general practice. Between six and ten STP areas are to be launched as accountable care systems. A survey by the Chartered Institute of Public Finance and Accountancy in September 2017 found that of 56 organisations who responded to a survey, 55 did not believe that joint working between local government and health organisations would be fully achieved in the next 5 years. They also found that there was no funding for plans to increase preventative work.


Accountability

Steven Broomhead, the chief executive of
Warrington Borough Council Warrington Borough Council is the local authority of the Borough of Warrington, a local government district in the ceremonial county of Cheshire, England. Warrington has had a borough council since 1847, which has been reformed on several occasio ...
, complained to NHS England in July 2016 that decisions were being made "without any local transparency". He said changes to where people receive services and what services they receive needed "local scrutiny and local community involvement".


Care in the community

It is planned to transfer patients to care in the community. This may lead to improved care in some cases but the
King's Fund The King's Fund is an independent think tank, which is involved with work relating to the health system in England. It organises conferences and other events. Since 1997, they have jointly funded a yearly award system with GlaxoSmithKline. Th ...
claims not all community care plans are credible because there are insufficient services outside hospitals and there is insufficient money to provide more. The King's Fund fears reducing hospital beds will increase the strain on hospital services which were overstretched during the 2016–2017 winter. Professor Chris Ham of King's Fund maintains transferring services to the community is a potential improvement in many cases and plans should be considered on their merits. Ham maintains further transfer to the community cannot be done without extra funding and urges the government to invest in community services. The
Nuffield Trust The Nuffield Trust, formerly the Nuffield Provincial Hospitals Trust, is a charitable trust with the mission of improving health care in the UK through evidence and analysis. The Nuffield Trust is registered with the Charity Commission as ch ...
reported that some STPs were planning up to 30% reductions in some areas of hospital activity - going against trends which have persisted for the last 30 years. They conclude that out-of-hospital care may be better for patients, but it is not likely to be cheaper for the NHS in the short to medium term.


Reaction to proposals

According to Dr Brian Fisher, "STPs are driven by the Treasury. They are focused on reducing NHS spend. (...) Unless STPs meet the funding demands of the Treasury, the plans will not be approved and areas will not receive any transformation money." An article by the King's Fund states, "Allocations from the fund for sustainability and transformation must be agreed in advance with HM Treasury and DH’." The same article states that the spending review, "is both ring-fenced and needs HM Treasury agreement to unlock." The
Nuffield Trust The Nuffield Trust, formerly the Nuffield Provincial Hospitals Trust, is a charitable trust with the mission of improving health care in the UK through evidence and analysis. The Nuffield Trust is registered with the Charity Commission as ch ...
think tank A think tank, or public policy institute, is a research institute that performs research and advocacy concerning topics such as social policy, political strategy, economics, military, technology, and culture. Most think tanks are non-governme ...
claims many suggestions would fail to implement government financial targets and involve a "dauntingly large implementation task". Sally Gainsbury of the Nuffield Trust said many current plans involve shifting or closing services... "Our research finds that, in a lot of these kinds of reconfigurations, you don't save very much money - all that happens is the patient has to go to the next hospital down the road. They're more inconvenienced... but it rarely saves the money that's needed." There will be a shift from inpatient to outpatient care but critics fear cuts that could put lives at risk, that the plans dismantle the health service rather than protecting it, further that untested plans put less mobile, vulnerable people at risk. By contrast, NHS England claims that the plans bring joined-up care closer to home. John Lister of Keep Our NHS Public said there are too many assumptions, and managers desperate to cut deficits were resorting to untried plans. A survey of ninety-nine
clinical commissioning group Clinical commissioning groups (CCGs) were National Health Service (England), National Health Service (NHS) organisations set up by the Health and Social Care Act 2012 to replace Strategic health authority, strategic health authorities and NHS pr ...
chairs and accountable officers conducted by the ''
Health Service Journal ''Health Service Journal'' (''HSJ'') is a news service that covers policy and management in the National Health Service (NHS) in England. History The '' Poor Law Officers' Journal'' was established in 1892. In 1930, it changed its name after ...
'' in October 2016 found very little confidence that the plans would deliver. An article in ''
The Guardian ''The Guardian'' is a British daily newspaper. It was founded in Manchester in 1821 as ''The Manchester Guardian'' and changed its name in 1959, followed by a move to London. Along with its sister paper, ''The Guardian Weekly'', ''The Guardi ...
'' by an anonymous NHS manager suggests possible substantial benefits from the plans. The system as a whole lacks money and an ageing English population has growing complex requirements. Health and social services need to be coordinated, STP's got people working enthusiastically together. The article suggests NHS England 'made up the policy on the hoof' and managers were under pressure to produce plans fast. NHS England gave fragmented guidance, coming in bursts with frequently insufficient time for responding to requests. There are fears secrecy within the NHS is hindering effective public discussion and without public discussion there is a risk of later delays, protests, judicial reviews. The author argues that full-time leaders are needed who will not put the interests of their own department before the needs of the whole and will send money where it is needed. Another ''Guardian'' article questions whether the plan might be to prepare for greater privatisation after 2020. Transferring services from hospitals to the community will only work if there is spare capacity in the community and GP's are already overstretched. There are too few NHS staff generally to enable the reorganisation. Critics are concerned that the plan will involve cuts but supporters insist some services will be cut while others will be enhanced. Senior Liberal Democrat MP
Norman Lamb Sir Norman Peter Lamb (born 16 September 1957) is a British politician and solicitor. He was the Liberal Democrat Member of Parliament (MP) for North Norfolk from 2001 to 2019, and was the chair of the Science and Technology Select Commit ...
accepted that the review made sense in principle but stated: "It would be scandalous if the government simply hoped to use these plans as an excuse to cut services and starve the NHS of the funding it desperately needs. While it is important that the NHS becomes more efficient and sustainable for future generations, redesign of care models will only get us so far – and no experts believe the Conservative doctrine that an extra £8bn funding by 2020 will be anywhere near enough." Plans were generally kept secret until December 2016. 43 out of 44 were published by December 2016. Oxfordshire, Buckinghamshire and Berkshire was, at that stage, still in dispute. One local manager described keeping plans confidential as 'ludicrous' and another said the 'wrong judgement call' had been made. Another person spoke about being in meetings where, 'real people' like patients and the public were not involved. The
King's Fund The King's Fund is an independent think tank, which is involved with work relating to the health system in England. It organises conferences and other events. Since 1997, they have jointly funded a yearly award system with GlaxoSmithKline. Th ...
reported the public and patients were mostly absent from plans potentially involving large scale service closing. Chris Ham of the King's Fund described suggesting out-of-hospital services and GP's could take over work now done by hospitals as a “heroic assumption” since both are under too much pressure. Some councils that disagree with the secrecy have published plans on their websites. Funds that should have gone to easing transition of services after closures instead went to plugging other NHS deficits. Sir Bruce Keogh defended the process in December 2016 saying "I think in a number of areas, will look very different. But what we have to be really careful about is that they serve the needs of patients and the local community. People are always up for change, but they fear loss, and I think that those who are proposing the change have a duty to explain to the local communities why those changes offer an improvement." Organisers of a protest march in London where tens of thousands of people took part fear the Sustainability Transformation Plans are a "smokescreen for further cuts". Hospital services could be cut in nearly two thirds of England and some hospitals will be completely closed. During the march
Jeremy Corbyn Jeremy Bernard Corbyn (; born 26 May 1949) is a British politician who has been Member of Parliament (United Kingdom), Member of Parliament (MP) for Islington North (UK Parliament constituency), Islington North since 1983. Now an Independent ...
said, “There are those waiting on trolleys and those who are desperate to get into an A&E department waiting hours for treatment. It is not the fault of the staff. It is the fault of a government who have made a political choice.” Corbyn also said, "The Tories and the coalition before them managed to cut taxes on big business. Don't let them tell you there's no money for the NHS. There's no excuse for it... the money is there if you collect the taxes properly to fund it and pay for it."
Len McCluskey Leonard David McCluskey (born 23 July 1950) is a British trade unionist. He was General Secretary of Unite the Union, the largest affiliate and a major donor to the Labour Party. As a young adult, he spent some years working in the Liverpool D ...
of Unite stated, hospitals, GPs, mental health, ambulance and community services are on their knees". Dr David Wrigley of the BMA said, "As a doctor I see day to day the serious pressures in the NHS due to the funding cuts from the government." There is concern that plans are being introduced hastily without evidence that they will be effective. Dr Mark Porter of the BMA said money was "wasted" and changes "rushed through without appropriate evidence". According to the
Local Government Association The Local Government Association (LGA) is the national membership body for local government in England, local authorities in England and Wales. Its core membership is made up of 317 English councils and the 22 Welsh councils through the ...
only 21% of councillors they surveyed in 2017 felt sufficiently engaged in their STPs, and less than 25% were confident that their STP would deliver on its objectives or bring benefits to the local community. The
King's Fund The King's Fund is an independent think tank, which is involved with work relating to the health system in England. It organises conferences and other events. Since 1997, they have jointly funded a yearly award system with GlaxoSmithKline. Th ...
in September 2017 described plans to cut hospital beds as ‘undesirable and unachievable’, pointing out that the UK has fewer acute beds relative to its population than almost any other comparable health system. According to Sir David Sloman the purpose of these plans is to focus on population health – helping people to achieve their maximum potential – rather than treating people when they get sick.


Legal considerations

STPs are not statutory organisations so any changes resulting from the plans most be implemented by their component bodies, and those bodies may be required to conduct public or staff consultations, or, in the case of foundation trusts, ballot their governors. Local authorities have the power to call decisions in for scrutiny. The
Health and Social Care Act 2012 The Health and Social Care Act 2012 (c. 7) is an Act of Parliament (UK), act of the Parliament of the United Kingdom. It provided for the most extensive reorganisation of the structure of the National Health Service (England), National Health Ser ...
provisions may also require approval of proposals from the
Competition and Markets Authority The Competition and Markets Authority (CMA) is the principal competition regulator in the United Kingdom. It is a non-ministerial government department in the United Kingdom, responsible for promoting competitive markets and tackling unfair beh ...
.


References

{{Reflist


External links


NHS SOS
article by James Meek in the ''London Review of Books'' National Health Service (England)