NHS capital plan: maȷor investment announced to rebuild “crumbling” hospitals and GP surgeries
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The UK government announced a £15 billion 10-year capital plan to rebuild and modernize NHS hospitals and GP surgeries, aiming to reverse a decade of decline. The plan includes £200 million for GP surgery expansions, upgrades to clinical spaces, and increasing appointment capacity.
A new long term plan to rebuild “crumbling” NHS buildings and infrastructure will end “a decade of national decline in the NHS,” the government has vowed.1The NHS 10 year capital plan budget, announced on 9 July, will be £15bn by 2029-30 for improvements to provide NHS patients and staff with “modern buildings, reliable equipment, and services fit for the future,” said health minister Karin Smyth.The investment will help patients get faster appointments and bring more care closer to home for patients across the country, Smyth said.The budget will include a further £200m to help GP surgeries to expand and modernise as part of the primary care utilisation and modernisation fund (PCUMF).2 The fund, which amounted to £102m in 2025-26, has already funded 790 upgrades to individual practices.The upgrades, which largely involve converting unused space for clinical use, will create extra capacity and “help unlock nine million extra appointments,” the government...