Three-year health plan includes âgood dealâ on staff pay
Securing a âgood dealâ on staff pay for 2024/25 is among the health ministerâs new three-year strategic plan for health and social care in Northern Ireland.
Mike Nesbitt also told the assembly that a consultation will lay out the Department of Healthâs proposals to make the Serious Adverse Incident process fit for purpose.
The plan involves a range of initiatives based around stabilising, reforming and delivering services, but lacks detail on how it will be paid for.
The minister said the pace of progress would be heavily influenced by future budget settlements and âsuccessful partnershipâ with the Executive.
The plan will also look at tackling obesity and advance proposals for an organisational duty of candour, as well as considering proposals for an individual duty of candour.
Nesbitt said he believed the plan would make a significant contribution as it indicates his direction of travel to secure better outcomes for staff, patients and service users.
âI am acutely aware of the intense pressures on staff and the serious shortfalls in provision across the system.
âStabilisation was the only viable option for this year, given the budget and other resource and workforce restraints.
âThe purpose of this plan, however, is not about what we cannot achieve â it is about improving the health and wellbeing of our population and making our health and social care services the best they can be. It is about hope and ambition,â the minister added.
âChristmas wish listâ
Analysis from Marie-Louise Connolly, BBC News NI health correspondent
This reads like the health ministerâs Christmas wish list.
Itâs an ambitious plan without targets or costings.
On a positive note, itâs good to see, pay, social care and health inequalities making the cut.
But how will all this be financed? Isnât that key?
Mike Nesbitt highlights how quickly he can deliver all this will be heavily influenced by budget settlements.
While thatâs the case for every Executive department, after weeks of revelations about health buildings haemorrhaging money, the Department of Health has a tougher case to argue.
The Christmas season has provided a backdrop for several ministers to release their wish list â while itâs a time for magic there needs to be a dose of harsh reality too.
What is in the plan?
The three-year plan sets out a series of initiatives to improve the health care system, including:
- Bringing forward a new obesity strategy framework
- Implementing provisions in NI on the UKâs Tobacco and Vapes Bill
- Proposing minimum unit pricing for alcohol
- Initiative on health inequalities
- New lung and expanded bowel screening programmes
- Health and Social care trusts to deliver 46,000 additional outpatient assessments and 11,000 additional treatments by 2027
- Publish plan to complete Multi-Disciplinary team model for GPs across NI by April 2025
- Implement new home care services, learning disability services and childrenâs social care services, including consistent care home placements
- Pay for independent adult social care sector to be the same as real living wage sector
- Reform neurology and stroke services with proposals subject to public consultations
- Reform pathology services and establish a single management structure for pathology and blood transfusion services
- Reviews on breast cancer and radiotherapy services and inform how best to deliver them in the future
- Initiatives on quality and safety of health services, including a consultation on the departments proposals to make the Serious Adverse Incident process fit for purpose