Following the publication of England’s 10 Year Health Plan, the International Foundation for Integrated Care (IFIC) released its report Beyond Ambition: Global Lessons for an Integrated NHS, which brings together international perspectives on translating ambition for integrated care into practical action. The report emphasizes the value of learning from global experiences to guide the NHS in achieving its vision of coordinated, patient-centered care.
IFIC Chief Executive Dr. Niamh Lennox-Chhugani highlights in her foreword that turning ambition into action requires understanding both successes and pitfalls from other health systems. The report draws on contributions from seven countries and a variety of stakeholders, including system leaders, family caregivers, and early-career health professionals, offering insights beyond domestic commentaries on the 10 Year Health Plan.
Contributors recognize the Plan as “ambitious,” praising its scope, vision, and the proposed three shifts from hospital to community, analogue to digital, and sickness to prevention. These shifts are seen as essential for fostering population-centered integrated care and creating the conditions for meaningful improvement across the health system.
However, contributors also raise important caveats. The Plan is often seen as lacking actionable steps for execution and does not sufficiently address wider determinants of health, public health, or social care. Most notably, the voices of people and communities are largely absent, a critical gap in building trust and ensuring the Plan aligns with population needs.
Global lessons highlighted in the report stress the importance of leveraging technology to coordinate person-centered care without increasing fragmentation, ensuring digital tools do not exacerbate existing health inequalities. Contributors also call for a broader emphasis on prevention, recognizing the impact of social and environmental determinants of health over purely individual behavioral interventions.
The report cautions against adding complexity to funding systems, emphasizing lessons from international examples such as Canterbury, New Zealand, where transparent resource allocation, simplified funding, alliance-based accountability, shared analytics, and investment in digital infrastructure have supported sustainable integrated care. Contributors advocate shifting from performance management to learning-focused systems and moving leadership toward collaboration, trust, and devolved decision-making rather than command-and-control models.
Overall, the report reinforces that while the NHS remains a global exemplar of universal health coverage, other systems are rapidly innovating and can provide lessons on making integrated care for population health a reality. Beyond Ambition serves as both a reflection on the English Plan and a platform for two-way learning, emphasizing that integration and population health outcomes depend on strong execution, community engagement, and evidence-informed, adaptable strategies.







