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 ➗ 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.
💬 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.
Share this post
Latest News posts
🎄 Why Christmas Decorations Can Trigger Symptoms
November 25, 2025
Side effects from Biologic Medication
November 24, 2025
Could this new gene-therapy technology help aspergillosis patients?
November 24, 2025
**Adrenal Insufficiency & Steroid Tapering:
November 20, 2025
**Understanding Medicines in Rare Forms of Aspergillosis:
November 20, 2025
🌿 ABPA: Infection, Allergy, Biologics, and What It All Means for You
November 18, 2025
News archive
- ABPA
- Air Quality
- Airway Clearance, Diagnosis & Physiotherapy
- Antifungals
- Aspergilloma
- Aspergillus Bronchitis
- Biologics
- Blood Tests
- CPA
- Carers & Family
- Communities
- Complementary & Supplements
- Complications
- Conditions
- Diagnostics
- Environment
- Events & Recordings
- GP Guidance
- General interest
- Housing & Damp
- Imaging
- Immune System
- Lifestyle & Coping
- Living with Aspergillosis
- Mental Health
- Monitoring
- Monitoring & Safety
- NAC & Guidance
- NAC Announcements
- Other
- Other Forms Aspergillosis
- Patient Research
- Pets & Animals
- Professional Guidance
- Recordings
- Research
- Research Summaries
- SAFS / Severe Asthma
- Side Effects
- Steroids
- Symptoms
- Travel and Insurance
- Treatment
- Vaccines
- Weekly Updates
