Title: The role of the NHS Purchasing and Supply Agency
1The role of the NHS Purchasing and Supply Agency
- Neil Argyle
- Associate Director of Purchasing
- Policy and Performance
- 5 December 2001
- Neil.Argyle_at_doh.gsi.gov.uk
2Agenda
- background to the Agency
- the NHS Plan
- Agencys Corporate Plan
- what does it mean for suppliers?
3Background NHS Supplies
- NHS Supplies formed 1992
- born out of NAO criticisms wasted purchasing
muscle - part of NHS special health authority
- 3 national operating divisions
- Purchasing
- Wholesaling
- Customer services
- all income derived from customers
4NHS Supplies scale of operation March 2000
- 4,500 national / sub-national contracts with
1,400 suppliers - 2.5 billion influenced spend (total NHS non pay
expenditure 2001/2 11 billion) - 12 warehouses
- 18,000 stock lines
- 42 million average total stockholding
- 530 million per annum stores sales
- NHS Supplies expired 31 March 2000
5Historical view of purchasing and supply in NHS
- focus on non-pay spend in secondary health care
- historical functional role
- contracting and distribution
- process driven and low profile
- expertise in operational activities
- price focused
- unclear priorities and strategies across NHS
- fragmented, variable practice
- NOT STRATEGIC
6Cabinet Office - Procurement Review 1998
- Overall principles
- working in partnership
- instituting best practice
- organisational change
- Procurement savings of at least 3 per cent per
annum achievable
7Trusts
- appoint board member with specific responsibility
for procurement - take responsibility for local procurement staff
- produce a written procurement strategy
- implement electronic information management system
8- wholesaler to logistics provider
- manage the supply chain
- increase influence 500 million 1,500
million - review potential for private finance
manufacturers and importers
NHS Hospitals Clinics Community GP surgeries etc
Wholesalers and Distributors
NHS Logistics Authority
9NHS Purchasing and Supply Agency
- works on behalf of the NHS
- executive agency of the Department of Health
- Chief Executive reports via NHS Operations
Director to Health Minister - Ministerial Advisory Board
- centrally funded
- framework agreement with Department of Health
10The Agencys objectives Framework Agreement
with DoH
- deliver a cost-effective supply chain
- ensure strategies reflected in ministers
policies and priorities for the NHS - establish overall framework for performance
management of procurement in the NHS - determine/control the appropriate level at which
procurement decisions are made - improve efficiency and effectiveness of NHS
procurement and supply chain - improve skills, expertise and professionalism of
NHS procurement staff - increase NHS boards awareness of procurement
issues
11The NHS Plan
www.nhs.uk/nationalplan/nhsplan.htm
- A plan for investment with sustained increases in
funding . . . . . . - NHS to grow 50 in cash terms, 33 in real terms
in 5 years - 7000 extra beds in hospitals and intermediate
care - over 100 new hospitals by 2010 and 500 one-stop
primary care centres - over 3000 GP premises modernised and 250 scanners
- clean wards and better hospital food overseen by
modern matrons - modern IT systems in every hospital and GP
surgery - 7500 more consultants 2,000 more GPs 20,000
extra nurses 6,500 extra therapists
12NHS Plan the reform agenda
- services to be redesigned around the needs of
patients - a new system of earned autonomy with 500
million performance fund - Modernisation Agency
- national standards matched by regular inspection
(CHI) - increased capacity for NICE
- NHS and social services to come together new
Care Trusts - role changes e.g. nurses able to supply some
medicines - patient input at all levels
- concordat with private sector
13NHS Plan direct improvement to patients
- patients to have GP appointment within 48 hours
- end of long waits in accident emergency
- maximum waiting time for an outpatients
appointment will be three months, and six months
for inpatients - big expansion in cancer screening programme
- end to postcode lottery
- rapid access chest pain clinics
- improving the patient environment
14NHS Plan investmentin equipment
- 50 new MRI scanners
- 200 new CT scanners
- 80 new liquid cytology units
- 45 new linear accelerators
- 3000 new automated defibrillators in public
places - 450 new and replacement haemodialysis stations
- extension of patientline (bedside TVs and
phones) - 250 million in new IT to underpin NHS
Information Strategy
15NHS Plan task forcesthe priorities
- improving access
- cancer
- CHD
- capital and capacity
- children
- inequalities and public health
- mental health
- older people
- quality
- workforce
- performance
16Shifting the balance of power
http//www.doh.gov.uk/shiftingthebalance/index.htm
- more responsibility to front line staff
- national standards/local delivery
- structural changes Health Authorities, Regional
Offices
17Agencys Corporate Plan 2001-2004 (1)
www.pasa.doh.gov.uk/publications/
- Agency will have made significant contribution to
NHS Plan - Agency will have led on NHS procurement
objectives flowing from wider government agenda - Agency established and recognised as centre of
expertise - all non-pay NHS expenditure will be subject to
best procurement practice - Agency will be influencing 80 on non-pay NHS
expenditure - at least 30 (3.7bn) will be purchased from
Agency contracts - there will be full NHS commitment to Agencys
contracts
continued..
18Agencys Corporate Plan 2001-2004 (2)
- the NHS will be trading electronically
- the NHS will be using an integrated supply chain
for at least 1.5bn of its expenditure - organisational structures will be in place across
the NHS that will eliminate fragmentation and
deliver efficiency - all staff involved in procurement issues will
have the required professionalism, skills and
competencies - all procurement activity will be subjected to
performance management to include demonstration
of best VFM and will be regularly part of Trust
Board agendas
19What do the changes mean for suppliers?
- procurement firmly on the agenda, at both
national and local level - more inclusive NHS procurement - joined up
purchasing and supply - opportunity for nurturing innovation
- emphasis on value, not just price
- a once only approach where appropriate
- modern systems
- A STRATEGIC APPROACH