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The new health secretary will face an uphill battle. 2015. http//tinyurl.com/ovw3j7a (accessed 1 June 2015)

NHS England, Public Health England, Health Education England, Monitor, Care Quality Commission, NHS Trust Development Authority. 2014. http//tinyurl.com/kcjenmc (accessed 1 December 2014)

Rimmer A It will take up to 31 years to deliver number of GPs promised by political parties, says RCGP. BMJ. 2015; 350 https://doi.org/10.1136/bmj.h2472

How will the election affect the NHS?

02 June 2015
Volume 7 · Issue 6

The outcome of the general election marks the first Conservative majority Government for 18 years. Despite polls anticipating results between Labour and the Conservatives to be tight, David Cameron's party achieved a convincing victory. So what effect will a Conservative majority Commons have on the NHS?

Health and social care was one of the key issues addressed during the 2015 general election campaign, and the Conservative Party have committed to spend at least an additional £8 billion on the NHS over and above inflation by 2020 (The Conservative Party, 2015). This is in line with the amount outlined by Simon Stevens in the Five Year Forward View (NHS England et al, 2015) as being required if the NHS is to be sustainable. However, the Conservatives have not yet indicated where this money will come from or how much will come each year.

The Conservatives plan to continue to strive for a truly 7-day NHS, and aim to give all patients access to a GP from 8:00 am to 8:00 pm, 7 days a week by 2020 (The Conservative Party, 2015). They have guaranteed that everyone over 75 years will get a same day appointment if they need one, and have said they will train and retain an extra 5 000 GPs (The Conservative Party, 2015). However, analysis published by the Royal College of General Practitioners suggests that under current systems, patients will have to wait until 2034 for the proposed additional GPs (Rimmer, 2015). The College has estimated that 8 000 more GPs will be needed in England by 2020 to keep up with patient demand, and so an emergency package of measures is needed if this is to be realised (Rimmer, 2015).

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