The NHS Constitution
Lord Darzi’s review of the NHS – ‘High Quality Care For All’ provided a ten-year vision to provide the highest quality of care and service to patients in England. To implement this vision, the NHS needs to transform services not only to provide a high quality health service but also value for money for the taxpayer.
Turning this vision into a reality means that the NHS must continue to change the way it works – how and where care is provided for example, but the fundamental purpose, principles and values of the NHS can and must remain constant. By setting these out clearly in the Constitution, we can all – staff, patients and taxpayers – have the confidence that the NHS can meet the challenges of the future on the basis of a shared understanding and common purpose.
These rights and responsibilities are the result of extensive discussions and consultations with staff, patients and public and it reflects what matters to them. In response to feedback from them, the final Constitution has been strengthened. It will help to improve patients’ experience of the NHS and it now includes:
• A new legal right to receive recommended vaccinations,
• A new right to choice, and an additional right to information to help patients exercise that choice,
• A new right to NICE approved drugs and treatments when considered to be clinically appropriate and
• A new commitment to provide access to an NHS dentist for all those who want it
For NHS staff the Constitution means an NHS-wide commitment to equipping them with the tools, training and support they need to deliver high quality care.
The ambition is that the Constitution will form the basis of a new relationship between staff and patients – a relationship based on partnership, respect and shared commitment where everyone knows what they can expect from the NHS and what is expected from them. The Constitution is not a lawyers’ charter.
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