Source · Select Committees · Public Accounts Committee
Recommendation 3
3
Accepted
Revise DHSC's RAAC crisis management plans, expediting surveys and replacement hospital construction.
Conclusion
Recent events have shown that DHSC will need to go faster with its efforts to deal with reinforced autoclaved aerated concrete (RAAC) in hospitals. The hospitals named in the government’s October 2020 announcement of NHP included only two entirely constructed from RAAC. Five other RAAC hospitals that DHSC knew 6 The New Hospital Programme about were not included then, only to have to be added later. By early 2023, DHSC had identified a total of 41 NHS buildings with RAAC. Removing or mitigating the risk of RAAC is disruptive, complex and expensive. DHSC has set aside a total of £685 million to fund RAAC works up to 2024–25 and has committed to removing all RAAC from the NHS estate by 2035. After the scale and impact of RAAC problems in schools escalated in August 2023, NHS England contacted trusts to determine whether there was more RAAC than it previously knew about. After our evidence session DHSC reported that, as at 17 October 2023, there were 42 hospital sites (at 39 NHS trusts) where RAAC needs to be removed. Rebuilding the seven RAAC hospitals by 2030 will be extremely challenging, yet there is a serious risk, if these projects are not accelerated and prioritised, that some hospitals may have to close before replacements are ready. Recommendation 3: DHSC should revise its plans for managing the RAAC crisis, including: • Expediting surveys of the NHS estate and publishing the results in full so the extent and scale of the RAAC problem is known. • Reviewing whether the commitment to eradicate RAAC from the NHS should be brought forward from 2035, and, in light of NHS estate survey results, reviewing whether the existing £685 million fund up to 2024–25 is sufficient. • Aiming to start construction before the end of 2025 on replacements for the seven entirely RAAC hospitals. • Appointing a named senior official to oversee delivery of its RAAC plan and to support NHS trusts to make the right decisions on the safety of RAAC buildings. • To ensure transparency on th
Government Response Summary
The government commits to publishing updated RAAC information on Gov.uk, aiming to begin early works for the seven entirely RAAC hospitals by the end of 2025, and will write to the Committee providing the name of the senior NHSE official for the RAAC plan. It will keep the 2035 eradication target and funding under review.
Government Response
Accepted
HM Government
Accepted
The government agrees with the Committee’s recommendation. Recommendation implemented The NHS has been at the forefront of the public sector response to RAAC and has been surveying sites since 2019. The department will continue to work with NHS Trusts to expedite surveys where possible RAAC is identified. While publishing surveys in full will not be possible due to the commercially sensitive information contained within, the government commits to continuing to publish and update information on confirmed RAAC within the NHS on Gov.uk. The department will continue to keep the commitment to eradicate RAAC from the NHS estate by 2035 under review. Significant RAAC eradication will occur before 2035, including the work to rebuild the seven hospitals most affected by RAAC as part of the NHP. The department supports construction on the replacements for the seven entirely RAAC hospitals as a priority, and at a minimum, we aim to begin early works to prepare sites by the end of 2025. The existing hospitals will remain open and safe due to ongoing monitoring and mitigation of existing RAAC, in line with current evidence and recommendations from the Institution of Structural Engineers. The department regularly assesses the financial implications of increased RAAC identification. Work is on-going with Trusts where RAAC has been recently identified to assess the financial and clinical implications of eradicating RAAC from these sites. The funding needs for RAAC mitigation and eradication beyond 2024-25 will inform the department’s bids at subsequent Spending Reviews and future budgets. The department will write to the Committee with an assessment of the scale of RAAC in other parts of the health and social care system, noting there is no obligation for private owners to report the presence of RAAC to the department. The letter will include the name of the senior NHSE official responsible for its plan on RAAC.