Hives: Health Services

(asked on 21st July 2025) - View Source

Question to the Department of Health and Social Care:

To ask His Majesty's Government what assessment they have made of the regional variations in access to specialist care for chronic spontaneous urticaria, and what steps they are taking to address those variations.


Answered by
Baroness Merron Portrait
Baroness Merron
Parliamentary Under-Secretary (Department of Health and Social Care)
This question was answered on 4th August 2025

NHS England’s Getting It Right First Time (GIRFT) programme addresses regional variations in healthcare by identifying areas of unwarranted variation and working with local teams to implement improvements and reduce differences. Through GIRFT’s Further Faster programme, hospital trust clinicians and operational teams are being brought together with the challenge of collectively going ‘further and faster’ to transform patient pathways, reduce unnecessary follow-up outpatient appointments, and improve access and waiting times for patients.

A Further Faster handbook for dermatology, which covers conditions like chronic spontaneous urticaria, has been produced, to share best practice and support National Health Service dermatology teams to reduce the number of Did Not Attend appointments, reduce unnecessary follow ups and, where appropriate, reduce the number of outpatient appointments by booking patients straight to tests, helping to free up capacity for patients in need of specialist dermatology services.

In addition, NHS England and the British Association of Dermatologists have established a specialist dermatology clinical reference group. Its objectives are to: measure and improve quality; improve value and reduce unwarranted variation; improve equity of service; and transform and provide advice and support to integrated care boards as they take on responsibility for specialised service commissioning.

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