Hospitals and NHS facilities '˜may need to be axed'

Senior medical leaders in Scotland have warned that hospitals and services may have to go if the NHS is to make the best use of scarce resources.

By The Newsroom Tuesday, 25th July 2017, 7:00 am Updated Tuesday, 12th September 2017, 11:39 am

The Royal Hospital for Sick Children in Edinburgh. Picture: Neil Hanna

The closure of redundant facilities may be “essential” if the NHS is to prioritise the “right and most valuable approach” to patient care, according to the The Royal College of Physicians of Edinburgh (RCPE).

It is calling for “courageous decisions” from political leaders in the face of “misleading” demands for “more doctors, more nurses” in face of tightening budgets.

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Health Secretary Shona Robison is currently considering a proposals to close Lightburn Hospital in Glasgow, while other services around the country could disappear as part of a shift towards regional “centres of excellence”.

These are often seen as the best way to maintain standards of patient care in areas like orthopaedics, maternity and paediatrics, as growing population demands increases the strain on services.

The RCPE warns Scotland is not making the best use of NHS facilities in a submission to Holyrood’s health committee. “With limited national wealth, decision-makers and influencers must realise that the removal of redundant, although cherished facilities, practices and remedies is essential,” its states.

“There is ample evidence about the right, and most valuable, interventions to prioritise. This involves choice, and taking a population approach in proportion to needs. The media’s focus on exceptions and deficits, and the most vocal advocacy, must have a counter-weight in evidence informed decision-making, taking judgement on comparative value.”

There are even fears that decisions to keep hospitals open are not being taken for the best clinical reasons but to avoid a backlash.

“There is the background of media, public and political expectation that the care services will cope whatever the inputs – ‘more doctors, more nurses, more ambulances and helicopters’.” the submission adds.

“This is persistently misleading, and leads to inappropriate investment decisions and failure to take courageous decisions to set and stick with priorities.”

Ms Robison is considering plans to close Lightburn Hospital in the east end of Glasgow which have would affect up to 700 patients as part of a £70 million cost-cutting drive by NHS Great Glasgow and Clyde. A previous plan to close the hospital was rejected by ministers.

It also proposes to move paediatric services from the Royal Alexandra in Paisley to the new Children’s Hospital at the Queen Elizabeth in Glasgow. Maternity services at the Vale of Leven in Dunbartonshire are also facing the axe

In Highland, the board of NHS Highland has approved a plan to set up maternity services at Caithness General in Wick as a Community Midwife Unit (CMU), with women at risk of birthing complications taken to Raigmore Hospital in Inverness, about 102 miles away.

Cleft lip and palate surgical services have been axed at the Royal Hospital for Sick Children in Edinburgh, with patients instead moved to Glasgow for surgery. In Edinburgh, Liberton hospital is to close next year after a further loss of beds recently.

A new national strategy for the NHS published by the Scottish Government last year warned that ongoing austerity cuts mean there will be “constraints on what can be achieved with anticipated future resources.”

It points to growing evidence that many less complex operations are best carried out in “specialist” units.

It adds: “This strategy sets out the evidence that some services should be planned at a national, regional or local level on a population rather than geographical boundary basis. This would mean that, for some services, there would be fewer specialist inpatient units within a region.”

A Scottish Government spokeswoman said: “People are now living longer lives, which means our health and care services must change to aid increasingly more people living with multiple, complex conditions. Our ambitions for the NHS are founded on the twin approach of investment and reform.”

Ministers say that NHS revenue spending will increase by £2 billion by 2021.

Labour health spokesperson Anas Sarwar said: “A decade of SNP mismanagement has left our NHS staff overworked, undervalued, under-resourced and underpaid.