The Prime Minister’s announcement of a long-term funding plan for the NHS creates an historic opportunity for the NHS to shift its approach to the ageing population.
We are all living longer – but at 65 years old we can expect to spend around a decade of our later years in poor health, and the current gap in life expectancy between the richest and poorest in our society is shameful.
As the ‘baby boomers’ enter later life, we face the prospect of a significant increase in the number of people in need of health and social care. In 15 years, we will have 1.2 million more people aged 85 than today – an increase of nearly 80% between 2018 and 2033. Pressure on the NHS and the social care system will only get worse unless urgent action is taken to support people to stay healthier for longer.
If we are to meet the Government’s stated ambition of increasing people’s healthy life expectancy by five years by 2035, the NHS must take a more strategic and forward-thinking approach to healthy ageing. This means a focus on prevention and maintaining independence – not seeing people as a collection of diseases or viewing old age as an inevitable time of frailty and decline.
To turn the NHS from a ‘national illness service’ that simply reacts to diseases into one that actively improves population health, we need a focus on four key areas: