Q&A

What is commissioning in the NHS?

What is commissioning in the NHS?

Commissioning is the process of procuring health services. It is a complex process, involving the assessment and understanding of a population’s health needs, the planning of services to meet those needs and securing services on a limited budget, then monitoring the services procured.

What does an NHS commissioning manager do?

You will be passionate about improving services and will lead on specific areas of work with the team, contributing to the commissioning of high quality services that will deliver improvements, address health inequalities and provide good quality patient outcomes.

What services do NHS England commission?

NHS England also directly commissions ‘specialised’ services (such as treatments for rare conditions and secure mental health care), military and veteran health services and health services for people in prisons (including youth offender institutions).

Does the NHS Commissioning Board still exist?

It was renamed NHS England on 26 March 2013, although its legal name remains the NHS Commissioning Board.

Are commissioning support units part of the NHS?

Commissioning support units were established in April 2013 from the remains of the primary care trusts and strategic health authorities as part of the reorganisation of the National Health Service in England following the Health and Social Care Act 2012.

What is a CCG in the NHS?

Clinical Commissioning Groups (CCGs) commission most of the hospital and community NHS services in the local areas for which they are responsible. Commissioning involves deciding what services are needed for diverse local populations, and ensuring that they are provided.

What is the role of a commissioning manager?

Execute and supervise dealings in accordance to commissioning guidelines and deadlines. Keep abreast in planning strategies to achieve project completion with available resources. Develop and manage pricing strategies for undertaking new offers.

Are CCGs part of the NHS?

CCGs are assured by NHS England, which retains responsibility for commissioning primary care services such as GP and dental services, as well as some specialised hospital services. Many GP services are now co-commissioned with CCGs.

Was the NHS the first free health service?

The UK’s National Health Service (NHS) came into operation at midnight on the fourth of July 1948. It was the first time anywhere in the world that completely free healthcare was made available on the basis of citizenship rather than the payment of fees or insurance premiums.

What is the process of commissioning in the NHS?

Commissioning is the process of procuring health services. It is a complex process, involving the assessment and understanding of a population’s health needs, the planning of services to meet those needs and securing services on a limited budget, then monitoring the services procured.

What are the steps in the commissioning cycle?

It is a complex process, involving the assessment and understanding of a population’s health needs, the planning of services to meet those needs and securing services on a limited budget, then monitoring the services procured. These steps form the commissioning cycle.

How are Clinical Commissioning Groups ( CCGs ) commission health services?

This course looks at how NHS England and clinical commissioning groups (CCGs) commission health services. The definition of commissioning, the stages of the commissioning cycle and how commissioners determine health priorities are all explored.

How is commissioning going to change in the future?

In order to deliver the triple aim, commissioning will need to continue to develop as it has since its inception. There will be a need for commissioners to work more closely together, aligning their objectives with providers and taking a more strategic, place-based approach to commissioning.