Search for:
kralbetz.com1xbit güncelTipobet365Anadolu Casino GirişMariobet GirişSupertotobet mobil girişBetistbahis.comSahabetTarafbetMatadorbethack forumBetturkeyXumabet GirişrestbetbetpasGonebetBetticketTrendbetistanbulbahisbetixirtwinplaymegaparifixbetzbahisalobetaspercasino1winorisbetbetkom
Kate Garraway racked up debt after cost of husband Derek Draper’s care exceeded her ITV salary | Ents & Arts News

Kate Garraway has revealed the monthly cost of her husband Derek Draper’s care cost more than her ITV salary, causing her to rack up huge debts.

The Good Morning Britain presenter announced her husband had died at the beginning of January after several years of serious health complications due to COVID.

The former political adviser was 56.

Garraway previously said she spent £16,000 a month on her husband’s basic care needs and mobility therapy.

Now, in a new documentary chronicling the final year of Draper’s life, the presenter admits the huge costs left her in debt.

“Derek’s care costs more than my salary from ITV and that is before you pay for a mortgage, before you pay any household bills, before you pay for anything for the kids, so we are at a crunch point,” Garraway says during the programme.

Pic:ITV/PA
Image:
Garraway says she had been left with huge debts. Pic: ITV/PA

“I am in debt. I can’t earn enough money to cover my debt because I am managing Derek’s care and I can’t even use the money I do have to support Derek’s recovery because it’s going on the basics all the time.”

She adds: “I’m not going to pretend that I am poorly paid, I have an incredible job that I love, which is well-paid, but it’s not enough.”

During two previous ITV documentaries – Finding Derek and Caring For Derek – Garraway said the cost of basic care for her husband was £4,000 a week, excluding the cost of therapy.

Kate Garraway and Derek Draper in 2006.
Pic: David Fisher/Shutterstock
Image:
The couple in 2006. Pic: David Fisher/Shutterstock

The presenter, 56, said at the time: “How can I afford that? How can anybody afford £16,000 a month?

“Please God, there could be another 40 years of this.”

Explaining the impact of caring for her husband, the presenter says in the programme she is not strong enough to push her husband’s wheelchair or get him into bed.

“We are entirely reliant on extraordinary carers but the system in which they work is unbelievably complicated, and underfunded, and trying to meet an impossible need,” she says.

Read more from Sky News:
Sean ‘Diddy’ Combs’ homes raided
Olivia Coleman hits out at gender pay gap
Cameron Diaz announces birth son

“Why is it that people who get sick and it’s no longer considered the right thing for them to be in hospital… why does coming home feel like falling off a cliff?”

Draper was left with extensive damage to his organs and needed daily care after contracting COVID in March 2020.

He was said to be one of the longest-suffering COVID patients, and returned to the family home, after spending 13 months in hospital.

Follow Sky News on WhatsApp
Follow Sky News on WhatsApp

Keep up with all the latest news from the UK and around the world by following Sky News

Tap here

In the latest programme, Kate Garraway: Derek’s Story, Draper is heard speaking on camera for the first time saying: “I want you to hear my story.”

“I want to be heard,” he adds.

Pic:ITV/PA
Image:
Draper became ill after contracting COVID in 2020. Pic: ITV/PA

During the programme, Garraway said she was told by officials that Draper “isn’t sick enough” and “doesn’t have enough of a health need to qualify for funded care”.

“I’ve appealed but that still hasn’t been processed two-and-a-half, three years later,” she says.

“If this is what it’s like for me, what on Earth is it like for everybody else?

“Something has to be done, or the whole service, the people working in it, everything is going to break.”

Kate Garraway: Derek’s Story airs on Tuesday 26 March at 9pm on ITV1, ITVX and STV.

Edinburgh care worker receives warning for going to work twice under the influence of alcohol | UK News

A care worker has been reprimanded for drinking alcohol hidden in a water bottle while on duty and later falling asleep on shift.

Sinead Collins has received a two-year warning on her registration for turning up to a residential care home twice under the influence of alcohol.

The Scottish Social Services Council (SSSC) said her bad behaviour occurred in June 2020 and December 2022 while working in Edinburgh as a deputy service manager at Share Scotland.

The SSSC found Collins’ fitness to practise impaired.

In a written ruling, the SSSC said: “During the first occasion, you proceeded to drink alcohol disguised in a water bottle while in your place of work.

“You also fell asleep while on shift and neglected your duties to the residents within the service.

“You put residents at risk of unnecessary harm, and it was only due to the actions of your colleagues that meant you were not allowed to work alone with residents and were in fact sent home.

“Acting in such a way falls below the standard that is expected of social service workers.”

Read more from Sky News:
Care home worker rapped over TikTok video
Carer drank alcohol on the job and uploaded boozy video to Snapchat

The SSSC said Collins had a good employment history but had not shown any insight or regret and had failed to apologise for her behaviour.

The care watchdog stated Collins had shown “poor judgment”, adding: “You abused the trust placed in you by your employer and the residents by attempting to work while you were under the influence of alcohol.”

The 24-month warning came into effect on Thursday.

How cancer patients receive the most modern care in buildings that are ‘not fit for purpose’ | UK News

Graham Hart has stage four cancer. It’s in his liver and his colon.

The 60-year-old self-employed businessman noticed some bleeding after going to the toilet and made an appointment to see his GP.

The doctor referred Mr Hart to the cancer specialists at the Royal Berkshire Hospital in Reading.

Mr Hart says the news was devastating but now treatment is under way he is more hopeful.

Graham Hart has stage 4 cancer
Image:
Graham Hart has stage four cancer

“I’ve seen the news and you do have anxiety about these things but once you’re up and running… it’s OK.”

Mr Hart is receiving the most modern medical care but his treatment is carried out in a building that opened in 1839.

And it shows.

The rain flooded through the ceiling of the waiting room yesterday forcing the evacuation of waiting patients to a drier part of the building.

There is a gaping hole in the ceiling and buckets are still there in case there is more bad weather.

Next door on the cancer ward the electrics can’t be upgraded or the listed building’s structure changed in any way.

Rain came down through the roof at the Royal Berkshire Hospital
Image:
Rain came down through the roof at the Royal Berkshire Hospital

Walking through the empty room, Mark Foulkes, the president of the UK Oncology Nursing Society, points to the hole in the ceiling and says: “The fact is that some of these buildings are just not fit for purpose, as we can see here – it rained last night as you remember, and it also unfortunately rained in here.

“So, patient care continues, we’ll get on with that, the staff are brilliant.

“The fact that we’re used to dealing with this tells you something about the challenges we face on a day-to-day basis.”

Buckets were put out in the waiting room to catch water
Image:
Buckets were put out in the waiting room in case there was more rain

It’s against challenges like this that the NHS must work to bring down record waiting lists at a time when demand for services continues to grow.

Read more:
Who was NHS founder Aneurin Bevan?
Barclay denies cuts are to blame for NHS struggles
Health inequalities widening in most deprived areas

Steve McManus started his career as a nurse. He is now the chief executive of Royal Berkshire Foundation NHS Trust.

He welcomes a new 15-year workforce plan to boost the number of health staff but says these workers will need the infrastructure to do their jobs properly.

Mr McManus said: “We also need a longer term plan, like the NHS workforce plan that starts to address the sort of physical environment, the technological environment, with the kit that we need to deliver modern healthcare services.”

The government says it will eventually deliver thousands of extra doctors, nurses and other healthcare professionals but the workforce plan is long term and the benefits will not be felt for years to come even though the pressures for the NHS are present now.

The hospital’s emergency department recorded its busiest ever day ever just a few weeks ago with over 600 patients seen.

That’s more than three times the number they would expect to see in the summer.

It is more evidence that NHS pressures exist all year round and not just during winter.

On Wednesday 5 July the NHS marked its 75th anniversary, with Sky News exclusively revealing almost half of people in Britain feel NHS care will get worse in the coming years.

It comes as experts warned that the NHS – created in July 1948 – may not reach its 100th birthday without more resources and fundamental reforms.

There is no denying the NHS its history, but unless it gets urgent help it’s future will be in doubt.

Nurses’ strike: Critical care exemptions in place for 28-hour walkout, RCN chief insists, ahead of industrial action | Politics News

National exemptions are in place to provide critical care during strike action by nurses, a union leader has insisted, telling Sky News staff would never leave patients unsafe or create more risk.

Royal College of Nursing (RCN) general secretary Pat Cullen was speaking to Sophy Ridge On Sunday ahead of a 28-hour walkout by members over pay.

The government has warned strike action without mitigations “clearly does put patients at risk”.

The industrial action will run from 8pm on Sunday until 11.59pm on Monday night after voting to reject the latest government offer.

Politics latest: Union leader says nurses are pushed to the brink

The union initially said it would not agree to derogations – broad areas of care where staffing is guaranteed despite industrial action – fuelling concerns about patients being put at risk.

It led Great Ormond Street Hospital (GOSH) among other organisations to declare a “business continuity incident” until it was confident it could staff its services over the strike.

The RCN subsequently offered assurances after the hospital raised “serious concerns”.

But Ms Cullen told Ridge wider, national exemptions were in place.

According to the RCN website, limited safety critical mitigations would include allowing some staff “to preserve life-and-limb” care in emergency departments and intensive care units.

Ms Cullen said: “Our nurses, as I’ve said time and time again, will never leave their patients unsafe or create more risk that’s already in the system at this point in time.”

Read more:
Health secretary ‘treating nurses as criminals’

GMB votes to accept NHS pay offer after Unite rejection

Ms Cullen added: “There are national exemptions in place for a range of services, for emergency departments, for intensive care units, for neonatal units, paediatric intensive care units, those really acute services.

“In fact, it was the Royal College of Nursing contacted NHS England to ask for a process to be put in place so that we could make sure that the strike was safe for our patients.”

‘Lives are being put at risk every single day’

Defending the latest walkout she added: “They’re going on strike because patients’ lives are being put at risk every single day, and why? Because we have tens of thousands of vacant nursing posts.”

Please use Chrome browser for a more accessible video player

NHS executive: ‘Strikes are disruptive’

Health workers across the NHS have gone on strike several times in past months in disputes over pay and conditions.

Unions including Unison and the GMB have voted in favour of a government pay offer to end the strikes, while Unite and the RCN have voted against.

Nurses make up a quarter of NHS staff and are the biggest proportion of the health service workforce.

NHS England warned staffing levels for some areas of the country will be “exceptionally low, lower than on previous strike days”.

Pay offer ‘fair and reasonable’

Warning of the danger of strike action without exemptions for emergency care, cabinet minister Mark Harper told Ridge: “It clearly does put patients at risk, which is why we urge the unions not to go ahead and do the strike.”

Appealing to the RCN, the transport secretary added: “I would urge them to think again and to do what the other trade unions in the health service have done, which is to accept what I think is fair and reasonable pay offer, reflecting the value that we do place on hardworking NHS staff.”

‘I don’t want to see strikes go ahead’

Speaking on the same programme, Labour leader Sir Keir Starmer refused to say whether he supported nurses going on strike without exemptions.

He said: “I don’t want to see strikes go ahead.

“The way to avoid strikes is to get in the room with the nurses and resolve these issues.”

A High Court judge ruled on Thursday it would be unlawful for the RCN strike to continue into Tuesday as originally planned, meaning it will now end just before midnight on Monday.

Emergency and urgent care to be prioritised over routine appointments during junior doctors’ strike, NHS says | UK News

Emergency and urgent care will be prioritised over routine appointments and treatment during this week’s junior doctors’ strike, NHS England says.

The strike will begin early on Tuesday and run through until the early hours of Saturday, bringing “immense pressures” to staff and services, according to national medical director of NHS England Professor Sir Stephen Powis.

The health body said that appointments and operations will only be cancelled “where unavoidable”, following an estimate by the NHS Confederation that this could affect some 250,000 patients.

Professor Sir Stephen said: “The NHS has been preparing extensively for the next set of strikes but managing additional pressure doesn’t get easier as time goes by – it gets much more difficult, not only due to the sheer number of appointments that need to be rescheduled, but also that they can take time to rearrange with multiple teams involved.

“This is set to be the most disruptive industrial action in NHS history, and the strikes tomorrow will bring immense pressures, coming on the back of a challenged extended bank holiday weekend for staff and services.

Please use Chrome browser for a more accessible video player

NHS braced as four-day strike looms

“Emergency, urgent and critical care will be prioritised but some patients will unfortunately have had their appointments postponed – if you haven’t, please do continue to come forward.”

The British Medical Association (BMA) wants the health secretary to negotiate to resolve 15 years of “pay erosion”, insisting that junior doctors have lost more than 25% of their pay in real terms.

The organisation has said the strikes could be avoided if the government makes a “credible” pay offer.

But the Department for Health and Social Care wants the strikes cancelled before it will enter into negotiations.

Read more:
Junior doctors’ strike poses ‘catastrophic risk’
Unhappiness with the NHS has reached record highs
Almost 280,000 nursing staff to vote on new NHS offer

In an op-ed for The Sunday Telegraph, Health Secretary Steve Barclay described the BMA’s position as “unrealistic”, adding: “This demand is widely out of step with pay settlements in other parts of the public sector at a time of considerable economic pressure on our country.

“A salary hike of this size would see some junior doctors receiving more than an extra £20,000 a year,” he said.

SHARE WITH SKY NEWS

Is your appointment or operation set to be impacted by the strikes?

You can share your story, pictures or video with us using our app, private messaging or email.

:: Your Report on Sky News apps

:: WhatsApp

:: Email

By sending us your video footage/ photographs/ audio you agree we can broadcast, publish and edit the material.

“I recognise their hard work and dedication.

“But it is deeply disappointing that this industrial action has been timed by the British Medical Association (BMA) junior doctors’ committee to cause maximum disruption to both patients and other NHS staff.”

Dr Mike Greenhalgh, deputy co-chair of the BMA’s Junior Doctors Committee, told BBC One’s Breakfast show: “If he was to bring a credible offer to us, it could still, even at this late stage, avert action.”

NHS: England’s top doctor says emergency care will be prioritised during biggest strike disruption to date | Politics News

Emergency care will be prioritised by the NHS next week when strike action by junior doctors will see the biggest disruption of services to date, with thousands of routine appointments postponed.

The industrial action is set to begin on Monday at all trusts in England for 72 hours.

It is the longest continuous period of walkouts to hit the health service in recent months, following strikes by nurses, paramedics and physiotherapists.

However, with around 61,000 junior doctors making up half of the medical workforce and no national derogations having been agreed, the NHS is warning the latest action is expected to see some of the most severe disruption to date, impacting on efforts to cut the record-high waiting list.

If you are an NHS worker and would like to share your experiences with us anonymously, please email NHSstories@sky.uk

As a result, emergency, critical and maternity care will be prioritised, as well as patients who have waited the longest for elective care and cancer surgery where possible.

Professor Sir Stephen Powis, the medical director of the NHS, said: “The NHS has been working incredibly hard to mitigate the impact of this strike.

“While we are doing what we can to avoid having to reschedule appointments, there’s no doubt that disruption will be much more severe than before and patients who have been waiting for some time will face postponements across many treatment areas.

“Where there are postponements, we’ll be trying to re-book as quickly as possible. However, it is vital to attend planned appointments unless told otherwise.

“We have no option but to prioritise emergency and critical care as a matter of patient safety, and we’re asking the public to help us and use 111 online as well as local services like general practice and pharmacies as first points of call, but people should of course always use 999 in a life-threatening emergency.”

The NHS stressed that the measures were needed to make sure safe care continues to be available for those in life-threatening situations.

It said routine appointments and procedures will only be cancelled where unavoidable and patients will be offered an alternative date as soon as possible.

Click to subscribe to the Sky News Daily wherever you get your podcasts

The warning comes after senior leaders reportedly told the Health Service Journal that ministers have not sufficiently sounded the alarm about the risk to patient harm posed by the strikes.

More than 98% of junior doctors from the British Medical Association (BMA) voted to take industrial action in the dispute over pay and conditions.

Talks between the BMA and Health Secretary Steve Barclay at the start of March did not improve matters, with the union saying the cabinet minister “refused to come forth with any improved offer”.

The BMA says that while workload and waiting lists are at record highs, pay for junior doctors has been cut “by more than a quarter since 2008”.

But the government says pay has increased by a cumulative 8.2% since 2019/20 and further wage increases aren’t affordable at a time of record-high inflation.

Health leaders ‘preparing for absolute worst’

Please use Chrome browser for a more accessible video player

NHS Crisis: ‘Past breaking point’

The NHS Confederation, which represents trusts across the country, urged both sides to “show willingness to compromise and bring these strikes to an end without delay”.

It said health leaders are “preparing for the absolute worst” with some taking down 50% of their planned theatre activity and others are opting for 100%.

Elsewhere one large hospital is having to rearrange more than 2,000 outpatient appointments and over 200 non-urgent surgeries next week.

Read more:
Around 23,000 excess deaths in 2022 were ‘linked to A&E waits’
NHS England set to miss two key targets of COVID recovery plan

Matthew Taylor, chief executive of the NHS Confederation, said: “We are disappointed the government and BMA have failed to put a stop to the forthcoming junior doctors strikes, especially after the positive steps that have been made with the other trade unions.”

He added: “… no national exceptions have been agreed to these walkouts, and many trusts will find themselves in a difficult position trying to navigate payment of the BMA’s recommended rate card for consultants when covering the work of junior doctors.

“This means it is likely that disruption to patient services will be like nothing the NHS has seen since industrial action started last December. Thousands of procedures and appointments are likely to be cancelled.”

Tens of thousands of elderly people have died without getting the care they need, charity says | UK News

Tens of thousands of elderly people have died without getting the care they need, according to a charity which is calling for more social care resources.

Age UK cited NHS Digital figures for England which show there were 28,890 support requests for people aged 65 and over in 2021/22 where the person died without any of those services being provided.

The charity said that equates to more than 500 deaths a week – more than 70 a day.

Age UK director Caroline Abrahams said: “There isn’t enough social care to go round and so some older people are waiting endlessly for help they badly need.

“It is heartbreaking that on the latest figures, more than 500 older people a week are going to their graves without ever receiving the care and support to which they were entitled.

“Nor can the blame for this parlous situation be placed on the pandemic, for while it certainly didn’t help, social care services were struggling to secure enough staff and funding in the years preceding it.

“Since then, all the evidence is that the position has not got any better and, on most measures, has continued to get worse.”

Ms Abrahams said long waits for social care cause “huge distress to older people” and place “intolerable pressure on their families”.

Read more:
Weak link of social care is taking UK’s health sector to breaking point
Care home capacity in UK shrinks for first time in three years

The charity has written to Chancellor Jeremy Hunt saying: “When you were chair of the health and social care committee, you expressed deep regret at being unable to fix the problems faced by social care during your time as secretary of state.

“Now, as chancellor, the Spring Budget is your opportunity to help the millions of older people, often unheard and feeling ignored, who are waiting for good, reliable care and support to live with dignity.”

A Department of Health and Social Care spokesperson said: “Everyone should have access to good quality social care when they need it, and our thoughts are with all those who have lost elderly relatives and loved ones.

“We are providing up to £7.5m in funding available over the next two years to support adult social care.

“This will put the adult social care system on a stronger financial footing and help local authorities address waiting lists, low fee rates, and workforce pressures in the sector.

“We are also tackling workforce pressures by promoting careers in adult social care through our annual domestic recruitment campaign and by investing £15m to increase international recruitment of care workers.”

A&E, intensive care and cancer nurses could soon join colleagues on the picket line | UK News

Nurses from emergency departments, intensive care and cancer wards could soon be asked to join their colleagues in strike action.

The Royal College of Nursing (RCN) is understood to be considering action across three days and throughout the night as its dispute with the government escalates.

The union told NHS leaders on Friday that it is preparing to end a process where it had agreed around 5,000 local exemptions from strike action within hospitals.

This would mean nurses in those three departments could become involved, although there would still be a limited provision for the most urgent clinical situations under the union’s legal obligation not to endanger life.

Read more:
Who is taking industrial action in 2023 and why?
Rising public support for unions despite widespread strikes, Sky News poll suggests

An RCN source said: “NHS leaders are fearing this escalation, and they must bring pressure to bear on government to get it stopped.

“They were expecting an escalation but had not prepared for the removal of the committees and derogation process that too many had manipulated at local level and applied pressure on nurses to break the strike.”

Dates for the next nurses’ strikes in England could be announced within days, and the action itself could then take place a few weeks later.

England’s nurses walked off the job for two days last week but a strike planned in Wales was called off after the Welsh government improved its pay offer.

In England, Rishi Sunak’s government has indicated it will not negotiate on pay for this financial year.

Click to subscribe to the Sky News Daily wherever you get your podcasts

Ministers have said they can look at next year’s pay, much to the frustration of union leaders, who say their members need higher pay now to cope with the soaring cost of living.

Nurses are among a number of sectors striking due to the inability of their wages to keep up with rising costs – rail workers, ambulance workers, solicitors, and waste collectors are among those who have walked off the job in the past year.

Extra £200m for care home places aims to free up NHS hospital beds | UK News

An extra £200m is being provided to pay for care home beds so people can be discharged from hospital quicker, freeing up space for people in greater need.

It follows a crisis meeting between the prime minister, health secretary and NHS leaders on Saturday.

Many hospitals are struggling to free up beds, with the situation exacerbated this winter by factors such as high levels of flu and rising COVID cases.

About 13,000 people in English hospitals are well enough to be discharged but still need some care before they can return to their own homes.

Local authorities will now be able to buy more short-term beds in care homes, as well as other settings, so people who are fit enough can leave hospital.

The government says more beds on wards will also help reduce pressure on emergency departments and speed up ambulance handovers.

Patients moved to a care home will be able to continue their recovery and get treatment from nurses, GPs and other health workers.

The £200m is in addition to a £500m Adult Social Care Discharge Fund previously announced and will pay for stays of up to four weeks until the end of March.

Health Secretary Steve Barclay is due to give more details in the House of Commons later.

He will also detail other measures such as six “discharge frontrunners”, areas that will explore “innovative” long-term initiatives on freeing up beds.

Please use Chrome browser for a more accessible video player

NHS crisis ‘worse’ than usual winter

In a statement, Mr Barclay said the NHS was “under enormous pressure” due to COVID, flu, the pandemic backlog, Strep A and upcoming strikes – and that he was now taking “urgent action” with the extra cash.

Labour shadow health secretary Wes Streeting dismissed the plan as “yet another sticking plaster to cover the fact that under the Conservatives, our health and care services are buckling”.

He said his party would “tackle the root cause of the crisis” as well as recruiting and retaining more carers in a “first step towards a National Care Service”.

The government says the health service will get up to £14.1bn of additional funding over the next two years to improve urgent and emergency care and tackle the backlog.

Some £7.5bn of the money is earmarked for adult social care and discharge.

Please use Chrome browser for a more accessible video player

Starmer proposes ’10-year NHS plan’

Other new initiatives include “virtual wards” – which involve people being monitored at home via devices such as pulse oximeters; and a new service for people who fall at home which health bosses believe can save 55,000 ambulance call-outs per year.

Shadow of pay dispute remains

As clinical demand increases, the government is also facing the prospect of further strikes from NHS workers, including nurses, later this month – and possibly junior doctors in March.

But the health secretary has doubled down on insisting pay review bodies are the best way for public sector salaries to be decided.

For months, ministers have been saying negotiations are up to those bodies, made up of experts and staff from the relevant fields, to decide.

Nurses stage a protest at the picket line outside St Thomas Hospital in London in December. Pic: AP
Image:
More nurses’ strikes are scheduled later this month. Pic: AP

But unions have said ministers have the final say on whether to accept the recommendations and have argued this year’s salaries were decided before inflation soared above 10%.

Mr Barclay is set to meet union leaders on Monday but wants to focus on pay negotiations for 2023/24.

The Royal College of Nursing (RCN) said it will go ahead with its strikes on 18 and 19 January unless the last few months of this financial year are discussed.

Read more:
Sunak tells health leaders ‘bold and radical’ action is needed to get through crisis
Record number of ambulances queue at A&E departments in England
How much are NHS failings to blame for rising excess deaths?

Pat Cullen, head of the RCN, has urged ministers to meet nurses halfway on their demand for a 19% pay rise for this financial year.

Prime Minister Rishi Sunak indicated to the BBC on Sunday only 2023/24’s pay is up for discussion.

Ms Cullen said she had a “chink of optimism” as she said she noticed a “little shift” in his stance.

Health Minister Maria Caulfield, who is also a cancer nurse, told Sky News’ Sophy Ridge on Sunday programme the talks on Monday would be about “both pay and conditions” after the government had previously said only a change in conditions was on the table.

Government plans to move patients stuck in hospital to care homes – but will not discuss this year’s NHS pay | Politics News

A new NHS winter care package is set to be unveiled by the government to move patients stuck in hospital to care homes.

Health Secretary Steve Barclay will announce the changes this week, although the total amount of cash that will go towards the initiative is still being settled.

Senior government sources told the Sunday Times it would involve spending hundreds of millions of pounds on top of the £500m for social care announced in the autumn statement.

‘Transparency is good thing’ says Starmer about Sky News project – live politics updates

The plan, which Mr Barclay will announce on Monday, is understood to be aimed at block-buying up to 2,000 care home beds in Care Quality Commission-approved facilities over the next four weeks.

Patients who should be discharged from hospital but have been unable to as they need more care but have nowhere to go will then be moved to the care home beds.

The aim is to reduce NHS waiting lists and ambulance waiting times that have been exacerbated by beds being blocked by these types of patients, through no fault of their own.

There are currently about 13,000 patients stuck in NHS hospitals who do not need to be there.

As the government faces further strikes from NHS workers, including nurses later this month and possibly junior doctors in March, the health secretary has doubled down on insisting pay review bodies are the best way for public sector salaries to be decided.

For months, ministers have been saying salary negotiations are for the pay review bodies, made up of experts and staff from the relevant fields, to decide.

But unions have said ministers have the final say on whether to accept the recommendations and have also argued this year’s salaries were decided before inflation soared above 10%.

Please use Chrome browser for a more accessible video player

Starmer proposes ’10-year NHS plan’

Mr Barclay is set to meet union leaders on Monday but the health secretary wants to focus on pay negotiations for 2023/24.

The Royal College of Nursing (RCN) said it will go ahead with its strikes on 18 and 19 January unless the last few months of this financial year are discussed.

Pat Cullen, head of the RCN, has urged ministers to meet nurses halfway on their demand for a 19% pay rise for this financial year.

Prime Minister Rishi Sunak indicated to the BBC on Sunday only 2023/24’s pay is up for discussion.

Ms Cullen said she had a “chink of optimism” as she said she noticed a “little shift” in Mr Sunak’s stance.

Health Minister Maria Caulfield, who is also a cancer nurse, told Sky News’ Sophy Ridge on Sunday programme the talks on Monday will be about “both pay and conditions” after the government had previously said only a change in conditions was on the table.

Please use Chrome browser for a more accessible video player

PM invites unions for ‘grown up’ talks

Mr Barclay, writing in the Sunday Telegraph, said he recognises “inflation has made life tougher for the workforce”, which is why he is “so determined to talk about what we can do next year on pay”.

“Doing this work through the independent pay review bodies process is clearly the best way to do this, not least because spending each winter frozen in pay negotiations with the unions would take focus away from the other challenges the NHS faces,” he wrote.

The health secretary added that he is “ready to engage with the unions” and NHS staff could get a significant pay boost from April – if they accept radical reforms to improve productivity such as “virtual wards” at people’s homes.

Members of the RCN pictured on the picket line outside St Thomas' Hospital, central London, on 20 December
Image:
RCN nurses went on strike for the first time ever in December

A Department of Health and Social Care spokesman said: “We recognise the pressures the NHS is facing following the impact of the pandemic and are working tirelessly to ensure people get the care they need, backed by up to £14.1 billion additional funding for health and social care over the next two years.

“This winter, we’re providing £500m to speed up discharge and the NHS is creating the equivalent of 7,000 extra beds to boost capacity.

“We are continuing to consider all options to help urgently reduce delays in the discharge of medically fit patients from hospital. Further steps will be set out in due course.”

On Saturday, Mr Sunak held an emergency meeting with health leaders as he called for “bold and radical” action to alleviate the NHS’s winter crisis.

He said a “business-as-usual mindset won’t fix the challenges we face”.