Wednesday, January 30, 2008

"Closer to Home" consultation: one day to go

The "Closer to Home" consultation about Hospital and Health services in Copeland and most of Cumbria is formally open until 1st February.

I strongly encourage any resident who cares about local health services in West Cumbria (or North and Central Cumbria) and has not already taken the opportunity to feed your views back to the PCT to do so within the next day or so.

You can feed in your views to the PCT at www.closertohome.org.uk

Tuesday, January 29, 2008

"Closer to Home" consultation: two days to go

The "Closer to Home" consultation about Hospital and Health services in Copeland and most of Cumbria is open until 1st February.

I strongly encourage any resident who cares about local health services in West Cumbria (or North and Central Cumbria) and has not already taken the opportunity to feed your views back to the PCT to do so within the next two days.

You can feed in your views to the PCT at www.closertohome.org.uk

Sunday, January 27, 2008

Health consultation: Five days to go

The "Closer to Home" consultation about Hospital and Health services in Copeland and most of Cumbria is open until 1st February. I strongly encourage any resident who cares about local health services in West Cumbria (or North and Central Cumbria) to take the opportunity to feed your views back to the Primary Care Trust (PCT) before that.

You can submit your views to the PCT at www.closertohome.org.uk

Thursday, January 24, 2008

Delayed "Closer to Home" meeting

The delayed public meeting which had been due to be held on Monday in Millom about the "Closer to Home" NHS proposals was held this lunchtime in the Network Centre at Millom School.

About forty to fifty local residents attended, including doctors, nurses, health visitors, and concerned residents and patients.

From the viewpoint of Millom residents there are some positive aspects of the "Closer to Home" proposals. These include

* the prospect of a "Health Campus" bringing together the community hospital, Nursing home, and other services.

* Promised efforts to bring more patients back from acute hospitals many miles away from Millom to recieve care locally in Millom Community Hospital or other local venues.

However, there are also some understandable concerns about the propoals.

* Millom Community Hospital is likely to drop from the present 14 beds to 9 beds under the proposals.

* There are concerns about the financial sustainability of the proposed model, and whether the savings it is based on can be acheived

* The issue of Ambulance cover was raised: the PCT propose to invest £2 million of additional funding improving the ambulance service in Cumbria but concerns were expressed about the level of cover in Millom.

* There is still a great deal of uncertaintly about how the arrangements for Emergency services and services for patients with signifcant trauma will be provided. It was admitted at the meeting that they cannot yet say how this will be handled for residents in Millom and South Copeland. Another consultation, similar to "Closer to Home" but affecting hospital services in the Barrow and South Lakeland areas is about to start: because patients who have an accident or medical conditiopn requiring emergency treatment in the Millom area are often taken to Furness General Hospital (FGH) in Barrow the trusts cannot make a definitive statement about how this service will go forward until the South Cumbria consultation moves forward.

One of the most powerful contributions to the meeting came from an Emergency Services doctor who works at West Cumberland Hospital and lives in Millom: he emphasised the need for enough beds at the acute hospitals if safe emergency care is to be provided.

The consultation is open until 1st February: I would encourage any resident who cares about local health services in West Cumbria (or North and Central Cumbria) to take the opportunity to feed your views back to the PCT before that.

You can give your views to the PCT online at www.closertohome.org.uk

Tuesday, January 22, 2008

Millom public meeting postponed to Thursday

The "Closer to Home" consultation public meeting which was due to take place in Millom yesterday afternoon (21st January) was postponed at the last minute.

It will now take place this Thursday (24th January) at 12 noon at the Millom Network Centre at Millom School in Salthouse Road.

The consultation remains open until 1st February. Copeland council agreed a response today which welcomed the fact that the PCT has improved the original proposals but still expressed concern at a number of areas.

Saturday, January 19, 2008

Millom NHS public meeting in two days

The "CLOSER TO HOME" public meeting in Millom will be held in the network centre, Millom School, Salthouse Road from 2pm to 4pm on Monday.

Monday, January 14, 2008

Civic hall crammed full for hospital public meeting

Hundreds of local residents crowded into Whitehaven Civic Hall this evening to attend a public meeting about the "Closer to Home" proposals on local hospitals. The room holds about 250 seats but very large numbers of people stood for two hours at the back and sides of the room. There were probably at least 400 people there to send a strong message that local residents support our local hospital services and demand first class healthcare.

At the start of the meeting it was explained by the Reverend John Bannister on behalf of the "Save our Services" campaign group that there has been significant progress on improving the proposals in the past few days.

There have been substantial discussions between the PCT, Acute Hospitals Trust, local clinicians, and the Save Our Services group for several months, and over the past few days progress has been made on resolving the concerns of campaigners and doctors, which include substantial changes being made in the "Closer to Home" proposals.

In the first place, it is no longer proposed to centralise all Major Trauma care in North Cumbria at Carlisle.

The exact form of words which should be used to describe future arrangements for Trauma Care was the subject of debate between doctors at the meeting. However, it is clear that the Acute Trust and PCT have recognised that treating all patients in the most appropriate place will mean that arrangements are necessary to treat some badly injured or very sick people, who cannot safely be moved forty miles over bad roads, at the West Cumberland Hospital.

I asked a question about this at the meeting: there is clearly some welcome movement on this subject, but it is extemely important that we get a cast iron promise from the trusts, using a form of words acceptable to the hospital consultants and to the public, that emergency and trauma care will be retained at the West Cumberland hospital, especially for those for whom the absence of that care would cause a serious risk.

There has also been a change in the proposed reduction in bed numbers at the West Cumberland hospital - originally from the present 320 beds to 172 acute beds plus 20 community beds. The Acute Trust is now proposing a guaranteed minimum of 220 acute beds at West Cumberland Hospital, with the possibility of going up to 250 beds if the efficiency improvements they are working towards are not acheived.

There has been some confusion about whether the bed numbers quoted for the West Cumberland Hospital include or exclude the proposed 20 intermediate "step up/step down" beds to provide "Community hospital" type services. My reading of the original document is that the figure of 192 beds originally proposed in the "Closer to Home" document did include the intermediate beds, so that only leaves 172 acute beds. However, the statement read out on behalf of Save our Services group by John Bannister refers to there as now being 220 acute beds.

We must remain vigilant on this issue. A representative of the Primary Care Trust (PCT) referred to the number of beds at WCH by saying that the PCT is consulting on proposals for 192 beds but that Acute Trust has now proposed 220. However, it does seem that there is welcome progress.

There were also welcome signs of progress on issues of palliative care and of stroke treatment.

It remains extremely important that as many people as possible respond to the consultation and make clear that West Cumbria needs our hospital services. As speaker after speaker said at the meeting, this is not the end of the story and we need to keep up the pressure.

Sunday, January 13, 2008

"Closer to Home" Public Meeting Tomorrow

The Whitehaven public meeting about the "Closer to Home" hospital proposals is tomorrow at 7pm in the Civic Hall.

This meeting will probably focus on the future of West Cumberland Hospital, though the proposals also affect community hospitals and GP services.

Several more public meetings are planned including one in Millom on 21st January.

There have been encouraging signs in the past four days that the logjam of discussion between the trust and local doctors is beginning to move, and that a new consensus on issues like bed numbers may emerge which will address some of the public's main concerns.

However, it is still extremely important that there is a strong turnout to show how strongly the public feels about the need to support our hospitals.

Tuesday, January 08, 2008

"Closer to home" public meeting: six days to go

The Whitehaven Civic Hall meeting to discuss the "Closer to Home" proposals for health services in North Cumbria will be held at 7pm on 14th January, six days from today. There will also be a public meeting in Millom, in the Network Centre, one week later at 2pm.

Monday, January 07, 2008

"Closer to home" public meeting - one week to go

The Whitehaven Civic Hall meeting to discuss the "Closer to Home" proposals for health services in North Cumbria will be held at 7pm on 14th January, a week today. There will also be a public meeting in Millom, in the Network Centre, one week later at 2pm.

Sunday, January 06, 2008

"Closer to home" public meeting - eight days to go

The Whitehaven Civic Hall meeting to discuss the "Closer to Home" proposals for health services in North Cumbria will be held at 7pm on 14th January, a week tomorrow. There is a Millom meeting in the Network Centre one week later at 2pm.

Thursday, January 03, 2008

Cumbria County Cabinet on "Closer to Home"

The County Council cabinet is among those who are expressing concern at certain aspects of the "Closer to Home" proposals, particularly the cut in the numbers of beds.

I know that their fears are shared both by some GPs in West Cumbria and by some of the hospital consultants at the West Cumberland. One GP has pointed out to his colleagues that if the proposals go ahead the West Cumberland will be trying to treat over 40% of inpatient acute cases in North Cumbria with fewer than 30% of the acute beds.

An extract from a draft letter to be considered at the Cumbria County cabinet on 8th January reads as follows:

“The changes signal a considerable change to the size and scope of the acute beds at West Cumberland Hospital. We would wish to be reassured that sufficient capacity was retained to meet modern demands for acute care across two sites.”

Under the Trust’s plan, the West Cumberland Hospital would keep its accident and emergency unit but a trauma centre at The Cumberland Infirmary, Carlisle, would deal with life-threatening cases.

County Councillors, rightly in my view, have doubts about that too. Their draft letter says: “There are concerns about journey times for emergency ambulances, particularly from more westerly and southerly parts of north Cumbria. For patients admitted to the Cumberland Infirmary, there are also very real concerns regarding public transport arrangements and journey times for the relatives. The needs of West Cumbria need to be very carefully considered in this context.”

The letter adds: “There is a particular need to address and be clear about the level of emergency care at West Cumberland Hospital, to minimise the number of patients who will need to go to Carlisle.”

(The Whitehaven News and the News and Star was the source for the information in this post about the views of County Councillors. My comments to the effect that many local doctors share those concerns are based both on views expressed by doctors at meetings which I have attended and on documents provided by doctors to close colleagues.)

County expresses concern about "Closer to Home"

Cumbria County Council's cabinet looks set to express some of the same concerns about the "Closer to Home" proposals, particularly the plan to centralise major trauma in Carlisle, as have been expressed by doctors at the West Cumberland.

There are signs of a consensus developing that some parts of the proposals are good but that the centralisation of trauma treatment is overdone and that more beds are needed than currently proposed.

More details to follow later today.

Tuesday, January 01, 2008

Happy New Year

A very Happy, Healthy, and Prosperous New Year 2008 to everyone reading this blog.

Especially to all patients and staff at West Cumberland Hospital, Millom Community Hospital, and Mary Hewitson Cottage Hospital in Keswick.

To help ensure that the second of these wishes comes true, I would strongly encourage all readers in West Cumbria to attend one of the public meetings on the "Closer to Home" proposals for local health services and let the local NHS know of your views and concerns about out hospitals.

There are five meetings in Cumbria, including two in Copeland. The first of these will be held in Whitehaven Civic Hall on Monday 14th January at 7pm, and the other at Millom in the Network Centre, Millom School, Salthouse Road at 2pm on Monday 21st January.