Top Menu

  • GitHub
  • Midlands Analyst Network and Huddles
  • SU Insights
  • Sign up for updates
The Strategy Unit

Main navigation

  • About Us
  • Our work
  • Services
  • Contact
  • Training
  • GitHub
  • Midlands Analyst Network and Huddles
  • SU Insights
  • Sign up for updates
  1. Home

Our work

  • Show all
  • Better use of analysis and decision making
  • (-) System thinking and system working
  • Primary, community and social care services
  • Inequalities
  • Urgent and emergency care
  • Wider determinants of health and prevention
  • (-) Elective / planned care
  • End of life
  • Mental health
  • Maternity services and child health
  • Specialised services
  • MDSN
  • (-) Show all
  • Learning and development
  • Strategy development
  • Futures thinking
  • Evaluation and impact assessment
  • Problem structuring
  • Economic analysis
  • Options appraisal
  • Comparative analysis
  • Complex modelling
  • Evidence reviews
  • Population mapping
  • (-) Show all
  • Blog post
  • Report
  • Long read
  • Tool
  • Guide
  • Show all
  • Abeda Mulla
  • Alison Turner
  • Andrew Jones
  • Andy Hood
  • Bethany Mitchell
  • Chris Beeley
  • Clare Humble
  • David Callaghan
  • David Frith
  • (-) Fraser Battye
  • Jacqueline Grout
  • Jake Parsons
  • James de Lacy
  • James Sandy
  • Jane Greenstock
  • Jon Cook
  • Josh Cook
  • Justine Wiltshire
  • Karen Bradley
  • Kathryn Rogers
  • Katie Davies
  • Katie Spanjers
  • Luigi Siciliani
  • Mahmoda Begum
  • Mark Thompson
  • Marya Mobeen
  • Matthew Revell
  • Mike Woodall
  • Mohammed Amin Mohammed
  • Natasha Stephenson
  • Paul Mason
  • Paul Seamer
  • Peter Spilsbury
  • Richard Ward
  • Romaana Kapadi
  • Sam Callanan
  • Shiona Aldridge
  • Simon Bourne
  • Steven Wyatt
  • Strategy Unit
  • Tom Poustie
  • Zaheera Teladia
Impossible Stairway Maze
Blog post 09/10/2025

Making sense of failure demand in the NHS

I must be an unpleasant creature to share a room with. I snore. I smell. And I’m seemingly addicted to my way of doing things.

Blog post 27/03/2025

‘Internal Consultancy’: INSIGHTS from evidence and experience

In this blog, our Head of Policy, Fraser Battye, shares his reflections on a recent ‘SU INSIGHTS’ event on the ‘Internal Consultancy’

Blog post 11/03/2025

Are ‘Internal Consultancies’ a good option for the NHS?

Ahead of a SU INSIGHTS event on the topic, Fraser Battye, our Head of Policy suggests ways the NHS could make better use of consultancy support.

Long read 05/03/2025

From ‘right drift’ to ‘left shift’?

Our Head of Policy, Fraser Battye, looks at the challenges facing the intention to shift care ‘from hospital to community’. He suggests that we have missed a critical part of the explanation for why this ‘left shift’ hasn’t taken place following previous initiatives.

Blog post 14/02/2025

Charisma

In this long read, which first appeared in the HSJ, Fraser Battye - our Head of Policy – looks at the role of charisma and innovation in the way that NHS resources are allocated.

Report 15/10/2024

What are the downsides of digital?

What are the downsides of digital?

Blog post 10/10/2024

Ara Darzi, Wes Streeting and English health policy. Part 2: cutting the knot

Following on from part one, Fraser continues exploring the Gordian Knot of English health policy.

Blog post 04/10/2024

Ara Darzi, Wes Streeting and English health policy. Part 1: the Gordian Knot

Health policy is not at a crossroads, it is in a bind. Strands so entangled, so complex they resemble a Gordian knot. Can this knot be untied?

Old medicine bottles
Blog post 16/07/2024

The risks of risk stratification

Medical history is full of bizarre and gruesome procedures.

Confused man
Blog post 20/05/2024

Want to ease pressure in urgent care? Simply cut community services!?!

What should decision makers do with analysis that challenges deeply held assumptions? In this blog, Fraser Battye reflects on a surprising recent finding about community services.

Gartner Hype Cycle
Blog post 14/05/2024

Outcome-based commissioning: can we rescue promise from the rubble of hype?

The first effect of policy is on expectations. In every case I can think of, the effect is inflationary.

Blog post 26/10/2023

How data makes things worse

All light brings shade. My list of ‘changes that have been all upside and no downside’ is short and debatable.

11/10/2023

Leadership training and support for organisational development: an offer from the Strategy Unit

The Strategy Unit has long been known for the quality of its analytical work, and the clear, critical thi

Blog post 12/05/2023

Diagnosing harms?

All medicines are poisons. Everything that cures could kill if administered in the wrong doses, to the wrong people, at the wrong times, in the wrong ways.

graphic showing inequality being erased with eraser
Report 04/11/2022

What are the ethical challenges in addressing inequities?

Produced by Angie Hobbs - the world’s first Professor in the Public Understanding of Philosophy – this paper examines the ethical questions raised by our report outlining strategies for reducing inequity.

Report 09/05/2022

Strategies to reduce inequalities in access to planned hospital procedures

UPDATE 10th August: Now including briefing note for Integrated Care Boards on legal duties in respect of reducing inequalities. This report guides ICBs through the process.

Report 22/06/2021

Less noise and more light: using criteria-driven analysis to tackle inequalities

Reducing health inequality is a long-standing aim of health policy. Yet the gap between policy aim and population outcome has grown in recent years: on most measures health inequalities have got worse.

Blog post 11/03/2021

A framework for understanding policy change

A new policy, strategic direction or major programme is announced.

Blog post 03/03/2021

Localism and the NHS: a case in four stories

In this blog, Fraser Battye makes the case for localism in the NHS. He tells four short stories. He suggests that these stories highlight an opportunity as the NHS enters a period of reform.  

Report 14/10/2020

Health service use in the last two years of life

Health and care services get just one opportunity to support people at the end of their life. When this support is compassionate and appropriate, unnecessary suffering can be avoided and grieving can be eased. When this is not the case, harm and distress can result. The difference in these experiences can be profound.

Pagination

  • Next page Next
The Strategy Unit
NHS Logo

Quick Links

  • COVID-19
  • Publications
  • News and Views
  • Contact
  • Cookies
  • Privacy
  • Accessibility statement

The Strategy Unit 

Copyright © 2025 | Website design by NHS Midlands and Lancashire / NHS Arden and Greater East Midlands.

Accessibility

100%
100%
Scroll to top