Posted on: 15 April 2026
Message sent on behalf of Rob Webster CBE, Chief Executive Officer, NHS West Yorkshire Integrated Care Board and Lead Chief Executive, West Yorkshire Health and Care Partnership
Dear colleagues
I am leaving the ICB today (15 April) after ten years of leading the Integrated Care System. It will also be my last day in the NHS, after 36 years in health and care, working nationally, regionally and locally.
Over that time, the world of work has changed almost beyond recognition. My first day in the Department of Health was spent in a shared office with two people who chain smoked. I had a desk and a phone and access to the computer room if booked. On the plus side, I could open the window to let out the smoke but that let in the leaded petrol and diesel fumes from Russell Square. Communication was through the internal grid system four times a day, with hand-written comments circulating over several days across London and down to Eastbourne. It was archaic but the work got done, decisions were taken and things continued to get delivered in a world where people waited years and years for treatment.
Over that time, the NHS and the care system has also changed significantly too. Revolutionary treatments, new systems of clinical governance, national standards and guidelines, much better access to care, new roles for professionals, better data and intelligence and a significantly improved estate in most places across the system make much of what is done now unrecognisable from 1990. Cancer survivorship is up, technological breakthroughs in surgery reduce trauma, statins extend lives, precision medicines and gene therapy are a reality, and people are no longer automatically incarcerated for having a learning disability or mental illness.
Of course, not everything has improved. Healthy life expectancy is falling, hundreds of thousands of people have dropped out of social care, inequity continues and the inverse care law persists. Racism, homophobia, misogyny and antisemitism are a reality in our society and in the NHS. Capital backlogs are at record levels and corridor care shames us all. The impact of COVID continues to require us to recover constitutional standards with moral injury for staff a reality as we operate in a distressed system. The drive for value for money remains as acute as ever.
I do, though, remain hopeful for the future. Because what has not changed throughout my time is the vocation, motivation and exceptional quality of the majority of people I have worked with, including all of you.
I have always said, “if you think competition is hard, try collaborating”! It is true but we have created a set of successful and meaningful partnerships in West Yorkshire that are built upon a common goal – to improve the health outcomes for people in West Yorkshire. In doing so, we always aim to tackle inequalities, unwarranted variation and poor value for money. Because all of these things are built upon a system that has an organising principle of improving quality.
Throughout my career, we have always flourished when we have used quality as the organising principle for collaborating and for care delivery. Safety, clinical and cost effectiveness, patient and carer experience appeal to everyone, wherever they work.
Conversely, we have suffered when we have overly focused on organisational structures and when quality has become a servant of money or divorced from the reality that staff and patients see.
That’s why I am grateful for your leadership – a leadership that remains ambitious, partnership focused, evidence based, transparent and where power is devolved and distributed using subsidiarity as the basis for getting things done.
As we enter a difficult period. Please do take the space available and lead together. It’s what you have done for many years now. Your work in the future builds on the work of the past for the populations and staff we serve. You have the agency and the capability to make a positive choice.
I believe everyone has potential and everyone should be supported to fulfil it. As the health and care system is a people business, then I am never too far from inspiration and motivation amongst colleagues. I know that this has not always been straightforward in recent years, with significant reductions in posts and financial distress. The ICB and its partners have faced a continuous round of change and cuts at a time when our roles are essential in tackling the issues of today – multimorbidity, racial inequity, poor access, inverse care law and a lack of productivity. Without a system approach, these issues will never be tackled and people will face shorter, sicker lives.
As we enter a period where we have a three-year plan, a medium-term strategy and the opportunities that digital innovation, devolution and a focus on Mayors brings, there is a chance to take the space available and succeed. For local people, all of our staff, the carers we support and the communities in which we live.
For those of you staying around, there is so much good and important work to do with the ICB. Our role will change in a better and simpler system. Our focus on partnerships and collaboration should not. We still face problems that can only be resolved together, and I am excited to see how your work continues to deliver the improvements we have seen across West Yorkshire. There is brilliant work to do with the ICB as a strategic commissioner, integrator and convenor. There are clinical services and vulnerable people who also rely on the ICB for continuing healthcare, medicines, safeguarding and other direct and indirect clinical support.
For those like me leaving, thank you for your service, the difference you have made to thousands of lives and the changes and improvements of which you can be proud.
I always ask my staff, “why do you do your job?” I have worked out that I only do my job for two reasons – to make a difference and to see my staff do well. There is evidence of both all around me, as well as frustration that organisational change has dominated too often and people have left who we do not want to lose.
Finally, I know that leadership operates in systems, is values based and happens at all levels. I see it every day. Thank you for proving that you can lead from every seat in West Yorkshire.
Take care, I am proud to have been the lead Chief Executive for the West Yorkshire Health and Care Partnership, and I am proud to have worked with all of you.
Rob
Rob Webster CBE