³Ô¹ÏÍøÕ¾

NHS report: why higher pay for health workers could lead to a more efficient and effective system

A comprehensive of the UK ³Ô¹ÏÍøÕ¾ Health Service’s performance has diagnosed the NHS as being in a “critical condition”. While also emphasising its strong “vital signs”, the report, by surgeon and former Labour minister Lord Darzi, certainly highlights many challenges.

Authors


  • Nick Krachler

    Senior Lecturer in Human Resource Management, King’s College London


  • Gerry McGivern

    Professor in Public Services Management and Organisation, King’s College London

The author said he was “shocked” by his findings, and the prime minister a ten-year plan to reform the service. Our research suggests that part of that plan must be to address NHS pay and staffing levels – and the morale of the people who look after the sick.

Darzi’s report was published just days before junior doctors in England are due to on a new pay deal which amounts to an , compared with pay rates in 2023.

If the doctors agree to accept the offer, their pay rise will cost the UK Treasury about £350 million. But the chancellor of the exchequer, Rachel Reeves, that this is much less than the cost to the NHS of junior doctors’ (estimated at £1.7 billion so far).

The government will no doubt be hoping that a deal will start to heal an NHS scarred by the issues reported by Darzi. To tackle performance issues like long waiting lists, hospitals more doctors, nurses and other health workers. And they need to keep hold of the ones who may be tempted to leave in search of better working conditions elsewhere.

An improved pay package for junior doctors could play a part in persuading them to stay. Research suggests that over remuneration is a major factor behind people working in healthcare their jobs.

There is also evidence that lead to better health outcomes for patients. It has also been shown that those outcomes, because it helps to secure , which mean health workers are more satisfied with their jobs and have enough time to do them well.

So perhaps the UK government’s pay offer signals a new direction for NHS pay trends, and a strategy that aims to achieve a balance between salaries and workloads. If it does – and if NHS staff perceive it to be fair – this could begin to overturn current and .

Investing in care

But it’s not just the doctors who think they should be paid more. At the end of June 2024, in of 2,252 UK residents aged 16-75, 48% of respondents thought that newly qualified junior doctors on £32,398 a year were paid too little. Only 6% thought they were paid too much. Similarly, 49% thought that newly qualified nurses on £28,407 were not paid enough.

The link between pay levels, workloads, and thinking about leaving a job can be explained by a concept known as an . It’s a feeling many people will be familiar with, wherever they work, and relates to the perceived fairness of the balance between the effort demanded by an employer and the rewards that employees receive. When people feel overworked and underpaid, the effort-reward bargain is not what it should be.

Where increased effort occurs, employees expect increased rewards, otherwise they perceive the situation to be . Generally, unfairness reduces motivation, increasing levels of dissatisfaction and .

Other important factors related to workloads and pay include nurses’ , and a sense of being unable to deliver care to .

These issues are not restricted to the UK, with many facing similar challenges. Health workers including doctors, nurses and ambulance workers in have gone on strike due to poor working conditions in recent years. In 2022, the World Health Organization’s European director called workforce challenges in healthcare a .

For long-term improvement in healthcare services, the government needs to ensure a fair effort-reward bargain, which should start by addressing pay concerns for all frontline NHS staff – and continue by embedding rewards into a comprehensive workforce strategy. This will require additional investment, but it is an investment which will lead to increased motivation, better staff retention and improved services – which will result in a better, more efficient NHS.

The Conversation

/Courtesy of The Conversation. View in full .