
Labour has pledged to “get the NHS back on its feet” through cutting waiting times, creating thousands of extra appointments and reforming dentistry.
In its General Election manifesto, the party said “we have saved the NHS before, and the next Labour government will do so again”.
It pledged 40,000 more appointments each week, during evenings and weekends, paid for by “cracking down on tax avoidance and non-dom loopholes”, as well as a return to meeting NHS targets, with patients waiting no longer than 18 weeks from referral for consultant-led treatment.
On GPs, Labour promised to train thousands more and will guarantee a face-to-face appointment for all patients who want one.
It promises to deliver a “modern appointment booking system” to end the 8am scramble for appointments seen currently and will incentivise GPs to see the same patients to promote continuity of care.
More pharmacists will be given the chance to prescribe, while opticians and others will be able to make direct referrals to specialist services or tests. People may also be able to self-refer where appropriate.
In other measures, the party said it will:
– Deliver more appointments by incentivising staff to carry out additional appointments out of hours and sharing waiting lists across neighbouring NHS hospitals to allow patients to be treated quicker.
– Use any spare capacity in the independent sector to ensure patients are diagnosed and treated more quickly.
– Commit to the NHS long-term workforce plan to train the staff needed for the future.
– Tackle strikes by working to “reset relations” with NHS staff on pay.
– Create a new ‘Fit For the Future’ fund to double the number of CT and MRI scanners so cancer and other illnesses can be caught early.
– Deliver the New Hospitals Programme to deal with crumbling buildings.
– Speed up recruitment of clinical trials into new treatments, giving more people a chance to participate through the NHS app.
– Ensure NHS trusts failing on maternity care are “robustly supported into rapid improvement”. Thousands more midwives will be trained, it said.
– Trial new Neighbourhood Health Centres, bringing together existing services such as family doctors, district nurses, care workers, physiotherapists, palliative care, and mental health specialists under one roof.
– Provide 700,000 more urgent dental appointments and recruit new dentists to areas that need them most. A reformed dental contract will focus on prevention and the retention of NHS dentists. A supervised tooth-brushing scheme for three to five-year-olds will target areas of highest need.
– Recruit an extra 8,500 new mental health staff to treat children and adults. New Young Futures hubs will provide open access mental health services for children and young people in every community.
– Bring back the measures in the Tobacco and Vapes bill to ensure the next generation can never legally buy cigarettes. It also said “Labour will ban vapes from being branded and advertised to appeal to children to stop the next generation from becoming hooked on nicotine.”
– Ban the advertising of junk food to children along with the sale of high-caffeine energy drinks to under-16s.
– Halve the gap in healthy life expectancy between the richest and poorest regions in England.
– Digitise the Red Book record of children’s health and enable vaccinations for babies and children as part of health visits.
– Work to implement the Cass Review recommendations on young people presenting to the NHS with gender dysphoria.
– Commission a new HIV action plan in England, with the aim of ending HIV cases by 2030.


