
Hälsa i grannskapet: Vad NHS-förändringarna kan innebära för din vård
Granskad av Dr Colin Tidy, MRCGPFörfattad av Thomas Andrew Porteus, MBCSUrsprungligen publicerad 16 apr 2026
Uppfyller patientens redaktionella riktlinjer
- Ladda nerLadda ner
- Dela
- Language
- Diskussion
- Ljudversion
- Lägg till i föredragna källor på Google
For years, one of the most common frustrations patients have shared is how fragmented healthcare can feel. You tell your story to one professional, then repeat it again somewhere else. You travel for appointments that feel like they could have happened closer to home. Too often, care only steps in once something has already gone wrong.
The latest plans from NHS England are an attempt to change that pattern. They do not introduce a single new service or a quick fix. Instead, they outline a different way of organising care, one that is more local, more connected, and more focused on keeping you well.
Care that fits around your life
At the heart of the approach is a shift away from hospital-centred care. Hospitals will always play a vital role, but the NHS is increasingly clear that not everything needs to happen there.
The intention behind neighbourhood health is that more care takes place in the community, in local clinics, through outreach services, or at home where possible.
For patients, that could mean fewer long journeys for routine care, more follow-up support closer to where you live, and services that feel less distant and more part of everyday life.
This is not just about convenience. It reflects a broader recognition that people often recover better, and manage long-term conditions more effectively, when care is delivered in familiar surroundings.
Finally joining the dots
If there is one idea that runs through the guidelines, it is coordination. The NHS has long been structured in a way that separates services such as general practice, hospitals, community care, and social services, even though people experience them as part of the same journey.
Neighbourhood health aims to bring those pieces together. Rather than operating in parallel, different professionals are expected to work as part of local, integrated teams. The ambition is that your care feels joined up, with information shared more effectively and decisions made with a fuller picture of your needs.
This could mean fewer gaps between services, fewer delays caused by miscommunication, and less of the burden falling on you to navigate the system yourself.
A stronger focus on staying well
Another notable shift is the emphasis on prevention. Traditionally, much of healthcare has been reactive, stepping in when symptom become severe or conditions worsen.
The new approach places more weight on earlier support. That includes identifying risks sooner, offering help to manage long-term conditions before they escalate, and making better use of tools that allow you to monitor your health at home.
This does not mean people are left to manage alone. Instead, it reflects a more continuous relationship with care, where support is available before problems reach a crisis point.
More personalised care - especially for complex needs
If you are living with multiple conditions, or need ongoing support, the system can feel particularly disjointed. Different appointments, different plans, and little sense that everything connects.
The neighbourhood model tries to address this by building care around the individual, rather than around services.
In practice, that may mean more personalised care plans and a clearer sense of who is coordinating your care overall.
It is a small but important shift in perspective, from treating conditions in isolation to supporting people as a whole.
The role of technology
Alongside these changes sits a quieter but equally important theme, the use of digital tools to support more connected care.
Shared records, remote monitoring, and services accessed through platforms like the NHS App are all part of the picture. The aim is not simply to digitise existing systems, but to make care more responsive and easier to access.
For many of us, this will mean a blend of digital and face-to-face care, rather than a replacement of one with the other.
What will actually change?
It is worth being realistic. These guidelines set a direction rather than delivering immediate transformation. The experience of care will not change overnight, and progress is likely to vary across different parts of the country.
However, over time, you may begin to notice subtle but meaningful differences. Care may feel closer to home, services may communicate more effectively, and support may arrive earlier rather than later.
A long-term shift, not a quick fix
The neighbourhood health model is part of a wider evolution in how the NHS sees its role. It is less about treating illness in isolation, and more about supporting people to live well, within their communities and over the long term.
Whether it succeeds will depend on how well it is implemented locally, and how effectively different parts of the system work together in practice.
But the direction of travel is clear. The NHS is trying to move towards a model of care that feels less fragmented, less reactive, and ultimately, more human.
Patientval för Vårdcentral och NHS-tjänster

Allmän hälsa och livsstil
Vanliga fraser i din journal förklarade
Om du nyligen har fått tillgång till din journal via NHS-appen eller en annan onlinetjänst, kanske du har stannat upp vid vissa fraser. Termer som "Fullt samtycke vaccination" eller "Patient avböjde" kan kännas obekanta, överdrivet formella eller till och med något oroande vid första anblicken. I den här artikeln förklarar vi vad dessa vanliga fraser betyder och varför de dyker upp i din medicinska journal från början.
av Thomas Andrew Porteus, MBCS

Allmän hälsa och livsstil
NHS 10-års hälsoplan förklarad
Den brittiska regeringen har lanserat sin 10-åriga hälsoplan för att göra tillgången till NHS-tjänster enklare för alla. Läs vidare för att ta reda på vilka förändringar som har införts och hur de kan påverka dig.
av Lawrence Higgins
Vanliga frågor
What specifically does the shift away from hospital-centred care mean for me as a patient?
It means the NHS is increasingly looking to provide care in settings other than hospitals when appropriate. This approach aims for you to recover better and manage long-term conditions more effectively, as care is delivered in more familiar surroundings, potentially closer to your home and community.
How will my medical information be shared between different NHS services under this new approach?
The new approach aims for better information sharing among different healthcare professionals and services. The ambition is for your care to feel more 'joined up', with decisions made based on a fuller picture of your needs, which could mean shared records and improved communication to avoid gaps and delays.
How will 'neighbourhood health' help if I have several health conditions that require ongoing support?
For individuals with multiple conditions or requiring ongoing support, neighbourhood health aims to move away from treating conditions in isolation. Instead, it focuses on supporting people as a whole, which could lead to more personalised care plans and a clearer sense of who is coordinating your overall care, making the system feel less disjointed.
Will I still have face-to-face appointments, or will everything move to digital services?
The new approach involves using digital tools like remote monitoring and services through platforms like the NHS App to support more connected care. However, the aim is not to replace face-to-face care. For most people, this will mean a blend of digital and in-person care, providing a more responsive and accessible experience.
What kind of changes can I realistically expect to see and how soon?
While the guidelines set a direction and are not an immediate transformation, you may, over time, notice subtle but meaningful differences. Care might feel closer to home, services could communicate more effectively, and you may receive support earlier rather than waiting until a problem reaches a crisis point. However, progress will likely vary across different areas.
Om författarenVisa fullständig biografi

Thomas Andrew Porteus, MBCS
Hälsoteknik
MBCS
Thomas skriver för att informera, inspirera och utrusta praktikledare och vårdpersonal som navigerar förändringar, med utgångspunkt i två decennier av praktiskt arbete inom det brittiska hälsosystemet.
Om recensentenVisa fullständig biografi

Dr Colin Tidy, MRCGP
Allmänläkare, Medicinsk Författare
MBBS, MRCGP, MRCP (Paediatrics), DCH
Dr Colin Tidy är en NHS-läkare, baserad i Oxfordshire.
Artikelhistorik
Informationen på denna sida är granskad av kvalificerade kliniker.
Artikeln finns också på Engelska, Tyska, Spanska, Franska, Italienska, Portugisiska, Hindi, Hebreiska, Arabiska, och Svenska.
Nästa granskning: 16 apr 2029
16 apr 2026 | Ursprungligen publicerad
Författad av:
Thomas Andrew Porteus, MBCSGranskad av
Dr Colin Tidy, MRCGP

Fråga, dela, anslut.
Bläddra i diskussioner, ställ frågor och dela erfarenheter inom hundratals hälsorelaterade ämnen.

Känner du dig sjuk?
Bedöm dina symtom online gratis
Anmäl dig till Patientens nyhetsbrev
Din veckovisa dos av tydliga, pålitliga hälsoråd - skrivna för att hjälpa dig känna dig informerad, självsäker och i kontroll.
Genom att prenumerera accepterar du våra Sekretesspolicy. Du kan avsluta prenumerationen när som helst. Vi säljer aldrig dina uppgifter.
Mer om allmän hälsa och livsstil
- 9 tips för att njuta och hålla budgeten denna jul
- En guide till UV-skyddande solglasögon
- Kan energikrisen leda till en psykisk hälsokris?
- Festival utomlands? Ha kul och håll dig säker
- Hur klimakteriet kan påverka kvinnor på jobbet
- Hur man klarar sig utomhus under en värmebölja
- Hur man har en hälsosam julfest
- Hur du hjälper din bebis att sova säkert i varmt väder
- Hur man lindrar kliande ögon på sommaren
- Hur man tränar under en värmebölja
- Nytt år, nya jag: Varför att återuppfinna sig själv 2025 kan vara dåligt för din mentala hälsa
- Läkarassistenter inom NHS: förstå rollen, debatten och dina rättigheter som patient
- Våren är i luften, men vinterbacillerna är fortfarande kvar
- Vattenkvalitet i Storbritannien del 1 – är kranvatten säkert?
- Vad kan du göra för att hjälpa till att förebygga artrit?
- Vilka hälsofördelar kan en fyradagars arbetsvecka ha?
- NyVad är en 'coolcation' - och kan det vara bättre för din hälsa?
- Varför upplever vissa människor sommarångest?
- Varför känner vi oss oroliga över att sjukanmäla oss till jobbet när vi verkligen är sjuka?
- Varför är medicinsk cannabis så svårt att få tillgång till via NHS?