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Our new data tool shows each NHS body’s additional spend due to the pandemic and their current financial positions
COVID-19 has required a huge response from NHS Wales, requiring more resources in many areas like staffing, equipment, drugs, IT equipment and services. At the halfway point in this extraordinary year, NHS bodies reported that the total net cost of COVID-19 related activity was £501 million.
Two key areas of spend were personal protective equipment (£130 million) and staffing (£109 million), with bodies employing a mixture of overtime, agency staff, students and returners. Major expenditure projects were the setting up and running of field hospitals (£122 million) and the Test, Trace, Protect programme (£30 million). As at September the Welsh Government had allocated £469 million of funding to NHS bodies for COVID-19 related costs.
These costs and overall financial positions are set out in our new data tool published today.
As well as direct costs, COVID-19 has impacted normal NHS services, and therefore finances, in a variety of ways. Understandably NHS bodies have struggled to make savings and forecast £72 million less than they expected. However, this is offset by a reduction in costs of £100 million due to delayed activity and paused investment.
Positively, despite the pandemic, the overall financial position of NHS Wales is stable compared to last year, assuming that the Welsh Government broadly funds COVID-19 related costs. NHS bodies report a total mid-year deficit of £43 million, with a year-end forecast deficit of £91 million. These positions show little change from last year where the mid-year and year-end deficits were £46 million and £89 million respectively.
As was the case last year, three NHS bodies are forecasting a deficit. Whilst Hywel Dda’ UHB’s position has improved and Betsi Cadwaladr UHB’s looks to be largely similar to last year, Swansea Bay UHB’s position continues to deteriorate. [Since these figures were reported last month, the Welsh Government has announced a package of strategic assistance funding for Betsi Cadwaladr UHB which includes £40 million to cover the projected deficit for the current year].
This has been an extraordinary year for NHS bodies and the financial costs of managing the pandemic have been substantial. At the end of last year, despite the overall improvement in NHS Wales’ financial health, several health boards continued to record annual deficits, and this looks set to remain in 2020-21. However, it is good to see that overall, assuming the Welsh Government funds the costs of dealing with COVID-19, NHS Wales’ overall financial position has not worsened whilst grappling with the exceptional impacts of the pandemic. I will expect to see good governance around additional expenditure and robust scrutiny of additional funding claims made by NHS bodies.