The NHS is beginning to look not just at how many people it treats, but how well those treatments work — and whether every pound spent makes the biggest difference to patients’ lives.
This idea is called value-based healthcare (VBHC).


🧭 What “value” means

In simple terms, value =

Better health and quality of life for patients âž— the resources and effort used to achieve it.

It’s not about cutting care.
It’s about making sure time, money, and medicines are used where they bring the greatest benefit — especially for people with long-term or complex conditions like aspergillosis.


⚙️ From “productivity” to “value”

Until now, the NHS has mostly measured productivity — how many people are seen, how many tests or treatments are delivered, and how quickly.

That approach works for short-term or simple care (like hip replacements or cataract surgery), but it doesn’t tell the full story for complex, long-term conditions such as aspergillosis, where the real goal is to stay well, avoid hospital admissions, and maintain a good quality of life.

So, over the next few years, these older productivity measures will gradually be replaced or balanced with value-based measures that ask:

“Did this care actually help patients live better and longer — and was it a good use of NHS resources?”

This means success will be judged more on outcomes and experience than on numbers and speed.


🌿 Why this matters for people with aspergillosis

Aspergillosis, whether Allergic Bronchopulmonary Aspergillosis (ABPA) or Chronic Pulmonary Aspergillosis (CPA), is often complicated and different for every patient.
Traditional NHS targets — such as waiting times or the number of appointments — don’t always show whether patients are breathing easier, feeling stronger, or coping better at home.

Value-based care changes that by focusing on:

  • Real health outcomes – fewer flare-ups, better lung function, reduced fatigue

  • Patient experience – how well care fits your needs, and how supported you feel

  • Sensible use of treatments – balancing benefit, side effects, and cost

  • Joined-up care – making sure specialists, GPs, and community teams work together smoothly


🏥 How the National Aspergillosis Centre (NAC) fits in

The National Aspergillosis Centre (NAC) already works in a value-based way:

  • It tracks outcomes such as infection control, hospital admissions, and steroid use

  • It listens to patients through groups, surveys, and education sessions

  • It combines research, expert treatment, and patient partnership to improve care

  • It shares learning with hospitals across the UK

As the NHS moves further toward value-based care, NAC’s approach — measuring what really matters to patients — is exactly the kind of model the health service wants to grow.


🔄 What might change over the next few years

You may start to notice:

  • More focus on your experience and progress: you might be asked to fill in short questionnaires about symptoms and quality of life (called Patient-Reported Outcome Measures or PROMs).

  • Better coordination between hospital, GP, and community teams — digital health records will help your care stay connected.

  • New measures of success: NAC may report things like “flare-ups prevented” or “improvement in wellbeing” rather than only how many people were seen.

  • More evidence about what works: shared data will help identify which treatments or combinations give the most benefit.


⚠️ What it does not mean

  • It doesn’t mean fewer services or reduced access for people with complex lung disease.

  • Rare conditions like aspergillosis will continue to need specialist national centres because they provide expert care that general services can’t.

  • The goal is to show that centres like NAC deliver high value — preventing complications, reducing hospital stays, and improving lives.


đź’¬ What you can do

  • Give feedback about your health and care — this helps measure real outcomes.

  • Take part in surveys or PROMs if asked — these are how value is proven.

  • Stay involved in patient groups and discussions — your voice helps shape what “value” means for people living with aspergillosis.


🌱 In summary

The NHS is moving from counting treatments to counting outcomes.
For people with aspergillosis, that means care that’s more personalised, joined-up, and focused on what really matters — your health, comfort, and quality of life.

The National Aspergillosis Centre is well placed to lead this change and to show how specialist, patient-centred care can deliver real value for people with complex lung disease.

Path: Start » NAC & Guidance » Communities » 💙 The NHS Is Changing: What “Value-Based Healthcare” Means for People with Aspergillosis

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