A recent report on England’s National Health Service (NHS) has revealed appalling conditions for mental health patients, with some being held in “vermin-infested cells” under inhumane circumstances. The report also highlights the severe under-resourcing of the NHS, including the shortage of MRI scanners compared to similar countries, and warns that the entire health system is nearing collapse.
The comprehensive review, released on Wednesday, was commissioned by Britain’s new Prime Minister, Keir Starmer, following his general election victory. According to polls, the dire state of the NHS was a key factor in voters’ support for Starmer’s Labour Party in July. The report emphasizes the immense challenge the government faces in revitalizing a healthcare system that has suffered from years of underfunding, bureaucratic interference and the lasting effects of the COVID-19 pandemic.
In response, Starmer announced that his government is developing a 10-year plan that could become the “biggest reimagining of our NHS” since its inception in 1948. The report, authored by surgeon and House of Lords member Ara Darzi, noted that the Conservative-led government’s austerity measures in the 2010s severely restricted the NHS’s capital investments, causing it to lag behind other nations in medical technology, diagnostics, and infrastructure.
The findings of the report come as no surprise to many Britons, whose satisfaction with the NHS is at an all-time low, having peaked in 2009. Even Darzi, who has dedicated three decades to the NHS, expressed shock at the extent of the decline, blaming the successive Conservative governments that have been in power for the past 14 years.
In remarks released before a Thursday speech, Starmer described the report’s findings as “unforgivable” and warned that the NHS must “reform or die.” He acknowledged the public’s anger, saying, “It’s not just because the NHS is so personal to all of us — it’s because some of these failings are matters of life and death.”
The NHS, funded by general taxation and payroll deductions, provides medical care free at the point of use, with few exceptions, such as dental services and prescription medications. Established after World War II by a Labour government, it aimed to provide healthcare for all, regardless of income. The NHS became so ingrained in British society that former Chancellor Nigel Lawson famously described it as “the closest thing the English have to a religion.”
However, in his upcoming speech, Starmer is expected to caution the public that it will take time to restore the NHS. This echoes his previous warnings that the challenges his government inherited in rebuilding the economy and public services may cause things to worsen before they improve. Starmer has outlined plans to digitize the NHS, shift care away from overburdened hospitals to community settings, and prioritize preventive healthcare.
Darzi’s report highlights that the failure to invest in the NHS has coincided with rising demand due to an aging population and increasing levels of chronic illness. The consequences include prolonged waiting times in emergency rooms, which are estimated to have caused an additional 14,000 deaths annually. Additionally, cancer survival rates in the UK remain lower than in comparable countries, with significantly higher mortality rates.
The report also criticizes the major restructuring of the NHS in 2012, initiated by Conservative Health Secretary Andrew Lansley. Darzi called it “a calamity without international precedent,” noting that these reforms fragmented the system and eroded trust among frontline staff.
Jennifer Dixon, CEO of the Health Foundation, noted that the report highlights some clear priorities for improvement, emphasizing that while the NHS is weakened, it is not beyond recovery if provided with the necessary resources. Darzi, who once belonged to the Labour Party but leftover its handling of antisemitism allegations under former leader Jeremy Corbyn, pointed out that government spending increases on the NHS during most of the 2010s were limited to 1%, compared to a long-term average of 3.4%.
The longstanding issues within the NHS were exacerbated by the COVID-19 pandemic, which exposed the system’s lack of capacity. The NHS entered the pandemic with fewer beds and staff than other high-income countries, and during the crisis, hospitals in the UK postponed or cancelled more routine care than any comparable health system. Consequently, waiting times for treatment soared, with emergency room queues more than doubling from an average of fewer than 40 people on a typical evening in April 2009 to over 100 in April this year.






