Friday 9 November 2012

Carwyn Jones' Statement to the Glamorgan Gazette


FIRST Minister for Wales and Bridgend AM Carwyn Jones sent the following statement to the Gazette:
The first point to make is that is no “downgrading” of any hospital is proposed. The intention is to work out how to deliver safe and sustainable services in the future.
It doesn’t mean that people will have to travel to Merthyr for A&E services. That won’t happen.
Secondly, service changes are being driven by doctors themselves, not by managers or politicians. There are four things to bear in mind:
The body that trains doctors wants them to get enough experience in their training. This has led to doctors increasingly wanting to train in centres of excellence where they get enough cases to deal with. If we don’t re-configure services in Wales, we’ll struggle to recruit in the future.
Services have to be safe. Yes, everybody wants a short journey to hospital but people also want to be treated by suitably qualified staff when they get there. At the moment this happens but for a hospital to provide most services it needs a team that can cover 24 hours a day, 365 days a year.
It’s getting difficult to recruit doctors in some areas. This is a UK wide problem, particularly in A&E. The hours are unattractive. We have also always relied on overseas doctors to staff the NHS but they don’t see the UK as a welcoming place anymore and they find it hard to get work visas.
It isn’t about money. The money is there to employ staff but there are vacancies. It’s not unknown for hospitals to advertise for senior doctors and for nobody to apply. We need to make the NHS in Wales attractive as a place to work and having more specialised hospitals is a way of doing this.
Inevitably, I want the Princess of Wales to be a regional centre of excellence with full A&E cover. I was brought up in this town and I live here still.
There has to be change, I know that full well, but I want that change to be for the better and over the coming weeks I will of course be making the case for Bridgend during this consultation process. That means safe services and the continuation of 24-hour emergency cover.



Health expert says change ‘misleading’


AN independent expert has described the health board’s controversial proposals to shake-up hospital services in the borough as “disingenuous” and “misleading”.
George Boulton, a senior NHS manager for more than 30 years, played a leading role in establishing the Princess of Wales Hospital in 1986.
After reading Abertawe Bro Morgannwg University health board’s “Changing for the Better” document – which outlines plans that could see Bridgend’s hospital drastically downgraded – Mr Boulton delivered a damning verdict.
He told the Gazette: “It is disingenuous to suggest concentrating hospital services and downgrading the Princess of Wales Hospital is ‘Changing for the Better’.”
Mr Boulton – now a consultant in international health policy, management and financing – was NHS chief administrator for the old Mid Glamorgan and responsible for commissioning and opening the Princess of Wales Hospital.
He said: “It is misleading to suggest that under the downgrading option, Princess of Wales Hospital would continue to provide ‘most of the services it now has for the people in Bridgend and surrounding areas’.
“It appears that it will cease to deal with increasingly common medical emergencies – cardiac and neurological events, common surgical emergencies, consultant supervised deliveries, inpatient paediatrics and other emergency conditions in all specialities.
“Since ABMU was created, increasing numbers of patients are travelling to access transferred services, without any consultation, to Swansea hospitals, in some cases for minor causes.”
But Hamish Laing, the health board’s director of clinical strategy, said: “When Mr Boulton was running the NHS more than 25 years ago, things were rather different.
“Most young doctors were men, now over 70% of medical students are female and are more likely to choose careers that permit part-time working and career breaks.
“NHS Wales could depend on large numbers of doctors from India and Pakistan to keep it running: no longer possible with changed immigration rules.”
The plans – running in conjunction with the six-health board South Wales programme – will see one or two regional centres set up at either the Princess of Wales Hospital, Royal Glamorgan Hospital in Llantrisant or Prince Charles Hospital in Merthyr Tydfil. Unless the Princess of Wales Hospital becomes one of the new centres of excellence, casualty, maternity and children’s departments could be downgraded.
Mr Laing added: “Of course we want to do more day case and ambulatory treatment and provide much more care in the communities where people live. This is perhaps the biggest idea we have proposed. We want to see equitable access to high quality services for patients across whole of South Wales when they need them.
“No-one is suggesting centralising care for people from Bridgend in Swansea hospitals.”
Mr Boulton, from Southerndown, said: “Some developments discussed in the ‘Changing for the Better’ document are overdue in South Wales – the regional trauma centre model, systematic management of chronic disease, the concentration of some specialised care.
“However, the document neglects important balancing evidence which is relevant to any judgement about what is best for the Bridgend area.
“Changing for the Better is in effect a finance-driven document.”
A public meeting about the hospital shake-up plans will take place at the Evergreen Hall, Bridgend, tonight from 8pm.




Sunday 4 November 2012

Trusted article source iconHealth figures 'don't add up'

Profile image for Llanelli Star
Wednesday, April 04, 2012
 
LLANELLI hospital campaigners have used official new figures to savage health board claims that recruitment problems back the case for a major shake-up in services.

Difficulties in attracting medical staff to Hywel Dda have been used as one of the board's key reasons behind proposals for service changes — which could see Prince Philip Hospital lose its A&E department.

But a report commissioned by the Department of Health has revealed the number of young doctors set to qualify as top-level consultants in England could rise by 60 per cent — leading to a projected oversupply of 20,000 by 2020.

With the potential for thousands of doctors to be forced to take jobs overseas as a result, campaigners argue Hywel Dda can no longer use this argument to support service changes.

The health board, along with the Welsh Deanery, maintain there is a great difficulty in attracting and retaining doctors in Wales.

But retired consultant surgeon Hugh Evans said: "This is something I have been saying for the past year — there is not a shortage of doctors.

"You only have to look at the number of students going into medical schools each year. They are all going to graduate, and every year you are going to get thousands of doctors. It is blindingly obvious.
"These people are using this as an argument, but they have to be challenged."

Speaking about difficulties in recruitment previously, a Hywel Dda spokeswoman said the board had had to advertise some medical vacancies several times due to a failure to attract the right calibre of candidates, adding that extensive recruitment campaigns had been carried out not only in the UK, but in Europe and other countries.

But Mr Evans said staff would not be attracted to the board if services were likely to be taken away.
"Nobody is going to go to a place where they won't get experience," he said. "It is nothing to do with Hywel Dda being a rural area — it is to do with the services that have been removed.

"They need to make the jobs sound good. They can't write a couple of lines about a vacancy, they need to make big articles about the jobs — full pages singing the praises of the area, the sporting facilities etc.

"But first and foremost we need to put the services back in so people can experience what they need to get on in their profession."

A health board spokeswoman said Hywel Dda was particularly affected by "very real" national recruitment issues. "For example, we are currently trying to recruit into 37 per cent of our junior doctor posts and 34 per cent of our consultant posts," she said.

"Due to the lack of specialist opportunities in Hywel Dda, we will continue to struggle to attract and retain senior medical staff.

"We need to make the most of being a major healthcare provider and support our medical staff in developing more specialist services to make Hywel Dda Health Board attractive to doctors.
"This report predicting a potential surplus in eight years does not help our current predicament."

Trusted article source iconHealth recruitment drive slows down

Profile image for South Wales Evening Post
Wednesday, October 17, 2012
 
A WELSH Government health recruitment campaign has filled just five vacancies in six months after it was launched in February, said Welsh Liberal Democrat leader Kirsty Williams.

She said the letter she received from Health Minister Lesley Griffiths showed that in January 2012 there were 214 medical vacancies in Wales and that in June 2012 there were 209.

Ms Williams, AM for Brecon and Radnorshire, claimed that First Minister Carwyn Jones failed to defend the recruitment campaign in the chamber yesterday when challenged.

She said: "The First Minister confidently told me a year ago that the doctor recruitment campaign would fill most doctor vacancies across Wales.

"Six months after its launch, there has been a net increase of only five vacancies. At this rate of progress, it would take him 20 years to address Wales's shortage.

"The Welsh Labour Government refused to set any targets for their campaign, but that is no excuse at all for completely failing to tackle this problem head on. There is an acute doctor shortage across the whole of Wales."

This summer, Abertawe Bro Morgannwg health bosses spoke of difficulties in recruiting doctors during the debate about removing acute medical services at Neath Port Talbot Hospital.
The Post asked the Welsh Government to comment, but no-one responded at the time of going to press.

Friday 2 November 2012

Do we want this to happen in Bridgend, Rhondda or Merthyr?


Briefing on the Rochdale story
​​​​​​​​​James Radcliffe 07/3/12

Background
The story of what happened when Rochdale lost it’s A+E department is an interesting example of what can happen in practice once services are centralised.

1. Initial proposals for service changes in Rochdale:
Between 2003 and 2005 a series of meetings and discussions led to the publication of two documents proposing profound service changes in Rochdale and the wider North East Manchester Area. These documents are ‘Healthy Futures’ – which concerns services in the Rochdale area, and ‘making it better’ which concerns maternity and neo-natal care in the wider greater Manchester area.

Healthy Futures:
Under the preferred option (which became the adopted policy) Rochdale infirmary stood to lose it’s A+E department, ability to perform emergency surgery, and acute medicine. It was also proposed that Rochdale should become a centre of excellence for Cardiology. Rochdale PCT denied this was ‘downgrading’, and said the A+E department would become an ‘Urgent care centre’

Making It Better
This was a review of maternity and children’s health services in Greater Manchester that proposed closing several units and concentrating services across a number of specialist sites. One of the proposed closures was maternity services.
Both sets of proposals went out to public consultation between Jan and April 2006.

2. Opposition to changes
There was widespread opposition within Manchester, and in particular Rochdale, to the proposed changes. The local authority (Rochdale borough council) commissioned Dr Sally Ruane of the health policy unit in De Montfort University to provide an independent report regarding the changes. Her conclusions were that there was no evidence to support the changes, the proposals had failed to take into account levels of deprivation in Rochdale, and had failed to apply equality criteria correctly.
An independent review panel, however found in favour of the changes, and the various health authorities started to draw up plans. A new consultation was launched in 2008, where the proposed changes were only given minor attention within a more general consultation focusing on public health measures and primary care. This masked the fact that the real intention was to continue with plans for centralisation.

3. Closures happen and replacement services do not materialise
It was only in 2010 that the implementation of changes started to begin (although some aspects concerning the failure to recruit of staff had already been happening). In a political move familiar to us, labour’s candidate for the 2010 general election – Simon Danzcuk – put out a leaflet accusing his lib dem opponent (incumbent MP Paul Rowan) of ‘scaremongering’ when he claimed (accurately) the A+E department will close. This was despite plans being already known for several years.

In June 2010 Pennine Accute Hospitals Trust (PAHT) announced that the A+E department at Rochdale infirmary was to close at night – staff shortages were blamed for this despite knowledge that this was the intention all along.

In November 2010 the local NHS trust announced that the proposed centre of excellence for cardiology in Rochdale would not be developed. In announcing this decision, it was explained that cardiology treatment requires critical care back up, and Rochdale no longer had the support structure necessary for provision of this service.

By December 2010, PAHT faced a severe financial challenge over the winter. The local authority unanimously passed a vote of no confidence in PAHT and the local NHS trust. In Jan 2011 it was announced that the A+E department and Maternity services would close within 3 months, thus implementing the plans drawn up years ago.

4. Consequences
Although it is too soon for a comprehensive evaluation to have been undertaken, with full statistical analysis of the impact, there have been several incidents that illustrate why concerns over centralisation should have been taken more seriously:
• In June 2011 a Man died after Rochdale Infirmary staff lacked equipment to resuscitate him during routine surgery.
• Leaflets had to be distributed in Rochdale advising people that A+E services were no longer available in Rochdale infirmary as people kept attending thinking they were there.
• Hospitals in East Lancashire reported an overspend due to increased pressure on their services as a result of Rochdale’s closure.
• Routine surgery in Rochdale also had to cease due to it becoming unsafe without backup services.
• Jobs are still at risk due to financial pressures
Conclusions
• Consultation processes in Rochdale appear to have been irrelevant to the outcome, with decisions already taken.
• Phrases in the consultation documents are very similar – need for sustainable services, safety being put first, no change not an option etc.
• Recruitment problems also identified as an issue, and blamed for short term closures instead of coming clean and stating recruitment problems are down to the fact services are being moved.
• Repeated financial difficulties of institutions – did not cease following centralisation.
• The labour party accused political opponents of scaremongering prior to an election, and closures started to happen after the election (2010).
• Senior management deny services are being downgraded – services later close.
• Following decision being taken, community facilities fail to materialise to reduce hospital admissions.
• Changes largely happened by stealth and slowly
• If they couldn’t make the ‘specialist centre/community health’ model work in an urban area like Manchester, how on earth can we expect them to make it work in a Rural area or an area with poor transport where the model is particularly inappropriate?

https://www.assemblywales.org/epetition-list-of-signatories.htm?pet_id=805

Thursday 25 October 2012

Consultants & Physicians Attack Proposals in Llanelli!

Prince Philip Hospital physicians attack plan on grounds of patient safety

Trusted article source icon
Wednesday, October 24, 2012
Profile image for Llanelli Star
A TEAM of physicians from Prince Philip Hospital have spoken out to "totally oppose" the health board's plans for changes at the site.
Just days before the end of Hywel Dda's consultation into its proposals for a major shake-up of hospital services, the Star received a letter signed by 10 physicians — including consultants — attacking the plans on the grounds of patient safety.
  1. Prince Philip Hospital
    Prince Philip Hospital
The letter states that physicians currently run "a safe and efficient service for all emergency medical admissions", and that their training of junior medical trainees was the best in Wales 2011 to 2012.
"For this to continue there must be support of a fully functioning CCTU, ITU, HDU as well as on-site emergency radiology and pathology services," the physicians wrote.
Safety
"We believe that the consultation document threatens the safety of this service because of the plans for a nurse-led only emergency department, and we believe it should continue in its current form."
Referring to Professor Marcus Longley's report into hospital reform, the group said the Prince Philip Hospital currently provided all the services recommended, as well as a 24/7 doctor-led A&E.
"No change is needed in this department," they wrote.
"We feel that without doctor support 24/7 in the department there is a significant clinical risk for patients with conditions other than general medical ones.
"Even though there may be protocols in place for the ambulance service, we know many of the patients self-present despite attempts at public education as proved in the recent audit of paediatric attendances to the A&E department.
"This is a major clinical governance issue as the general physicians are not trained in paediatrics, trauma and orthopaedics, and obstetrics and gynaecology.
"If such patients attend a nurse-only minor injuries unit then the only available doctors will be the medical team.
"This is unsafe."
The physicians added concerns around training, claiming that trainees in medical specialities would be seeing non-medical patients.
They concluded by saying: "As a team of physicians we are not prepared to support a nurse-led A&E unit at Prince Philip Hospital as we are not prepared to work outside our area of clinical competence.
"For these reasons we are totally opposed to the proposed changes for a nurse-led A&E on the grounds of patient safety.
"The health board will need to take corporate governance responsibilities if this is forced upon us."
The letter was signed by Phil Avery, Andy Haden, Robbie Ghosal, Lena Izzat, Keir Lewis, Granville Morris, Ian Rees, Sam Rice, Peter Thomas and Meurig Williams.
How the health board responded:
HYWEL Dda chief executive Trevor Purt and chairman Chris Martin issued the following response to the physicians’ letter:
“We are surprised and disappointed that our physicians have chosen to express their views to the media in this way. The health board remains in consultation and this response will be considered, as all others, as part of the formal process.
“We would like to make it clear however that we would not consider unsafe options for our population and there is no expectation that physicians will be required to work outside of their area of expertise.
“As previously stated, we would like to reaffirm that the proposal is for a local accident centre delivered 24/7 by highly skilled, emergency nurse practitioners and supported by consultants via telemedicine video conferencing.
“We would urge readers to look at our factsheet on page 13 of this week’s newspaper which details the services and new developments that will be available at Prince Philip Hospital under our preferred options.”

Politicians unite to campaign against potential downgrade of hospital services - Bridgend & Maesteg - South Wales Valleys - News from @walesonline

Politicians unite to campaign against potential downgrade of hospital services - Bridgend & Maesteg - South Wales Valleys - News from @walesonline

POLITICIANS from across the party divide have joined together to campaign against the potential downgrading of hospital services.

Last month, the Gazette revealed health board proposals could see services hit at the accident and emergency, maternity and children’s departments at Bridgend’s Princess of Wales Hospital.

Now Tory AMs Byron Davies and Suzy Davies, Liberal Democrat AM Peter Black and a Plaid Cymru health researcher have all agreed to speak at a public meeting next month.

The controversial plans – detailed in Abertawe Bro Morgannwg University Health Board’s Changing for the Better report – were sparked by a shortage of cash and doctors.
Under the plans, casualty, maternity and children’s departments at Bridgend’s hospital could be merged with the Royal Glamorgan Hospital, Llantrisant, or the Prince Charles Hospital, Merthyr Tydfil.

Ian Spiller was so incensed when he read about the possible downgrading of services he decided to take action.

Mr Spiller, a community councillor for Broadlands, set up on a campaign group social networking website Facebook and an online petition which has received more than 1,500 pledges of support.
He told the Gazette: “It is imperative that we act now to save our services.“I believe with growing populations we need more, not less service locally.
“We are not talking about highly specialist services here, we discussing basic hospital services like A&E, children’s wards, special babies unit and consultant-led births.”

Bridgend AM and First Minister of Wales Carwyn Jones said he will be unable to attend the meeting due to a ministerial commitment in London
But he said he will be sending a statement to the Gazette for publication ahead of the meeting.

Tim Thomas, a former Plaid Cymru Assembly candidate, of Erw Hir, Bridgend, helped organise the meeting.
“I would urge any resident concerned by these proposals to attend the campaign meeting,” he said. “In an emergency, it is vital that people get prompt treatment.”
The meeting will take place in the Evergreen Hall, Bridgend, on Thursday, November 8, from 7.30pm


Read More http://www.walesonline.co.uk/news/south-wales-news/bridgend-maesteg/2012/10/25/politicians-unite-to-campaign-against-potential-downgrade-of-hospital-services-91466-32098396/#ixzz2AJwnYsO3

Thursday 18 October 2012

Campaign Launch Meeting - 8th November

A significant step forward forward today with the launch of the opposition campaign against downgrading of hospital services in Bridgend and surrounding area.

Meeting date set for Thursday 8th November from 7.30-9.30pm in Evergreen Hall, Bridgend.

More information to follow ...


Tuesday 16 October 2012

Proposals or panic?

Doctor driven Proposals we are told?

More like doctors ideas on how to plug a gap of poor recruiting, bad management and under funding... Reports that some GP's given 3 days notice for meetings arranged in surgery hours, then told if they could not attend come to the public sessions?

Does this sound like positive engagement or rushed through proposals based on the inability of NHS managers, politicians to recruit enough doctors to copy with the European working hours directive that came in nearly a decade ago.

If this was a privately run business the managers would be sacked for incompetitance or the business would be bankrupt.

Why is the last 10 years have we failed to produce solutions to problems, and the result - the only viable solution te NHS health boards are considering is reducing services, increasing travel times, increasing risk to patients all in the name of progress?

Don't wait for the inevitable, how would you feel if your hospital services were downgraded? Basic services needed by growing populations such as a&e, children's wards (paediatric), premature and poorly baby care (neonatal), consultant led births (obstetric) this is the reality of 1 or 2 communities in the locality of Bridgend, llantrisant and Merthyr tydfil whose hospitals face major change as result of the current engagement proposals.

ACT NOW - SIGN THE PETITION, STOP THE DOWNGRADE!

http://www.facebook.com/l.php?u=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.assemblywales.org%2Fepetition-list-of-signatories.htm%3Fpet_id%3D805&h=0AQET6uTq&s=1

#bridgend #saveprincessofwales

Tuesday 9 October 2012

Dates for you to air your concerns

From ABM website

Dates for information drop in sessions, which will run from 11am to 7pm. We hope to also arrange additional drop-in days and will announce these details shortly. Please come along and meet us!

17th October, 2012 - Pavillion, Porthcawl, Bridgend
22nd October, 2012 - Scout and Guide Headquarters, Brynmill, Swansea
26th October, 2012 - Carnegie Hall, Skewen, Neath
31st October, 2012 - Maesteg Leisure Centre
2nd November, 2012 - Croeserw Community Centre, Port Talbot
8th November, 2012 - Gorseinon Centre, Swansea
13th November, 2012 - Grand Theatre, Swansea
16th November, 2012 - Arts Centre, Pontardawe, Neath
22nd November, 2012 - ARC Centre, Bridgend
28th November, 2012 - Morriston Leisure Centre, Swansea
6th December, 2012 - Gendros Community Centre, Swansea

Additional dates added 5th October 2012:

29th October, 2012 - Pyle Life Centre, Bridgend from 11am to 6pm
19th November, 2012 - Princess Royal Theatre, Port Talbot from 11am to 7pm.
26th November, 2012 - St. Hilary’s Church Hall, Killay from 12pm to 7pm.

900 People sign petition in 5 days

I am please to announce that within 5 days of our petition going live on the Welsh Assembly website we now have over 900 people signed up in opposition of the proposal for change outlined by the NHS South Wales Health Boards.

Despite a huge amount of spin and a public relations campaign, the public are not fools and thankfully are refusing to be treated as such.

Please visit our petition at:
https://www.assemblywales.org/epetition-list-of-signatories.htm?pet_id=805

I am also please to say since its launched on 1st October 2012 our Facebook page has received 1600 likes and is generated huge amounts of interest and awareness to the cause.

Today has been a day of cooperation between the 3 main opposition parties whose local Regional Assembly Members have all come out in support of our campaign, my thanks to Peter Black, Welsh Liberal Democrats, Suzy Davies & Byron Davies, Welsh Conservative and Bethan Jenkins, Plaid Cymru. All of whom recognise this policy is unacceptable and is playing with people's health and well being.

#bridgend #saveprincessofwales

Monday 8 October 2012

A great letter in South Wales Echo

The number of hospitals in South Wales offering specialist care for the most sick and badly injured will be reduced to four or five under proposals to modernise the NHS (“Revamp plan for hospitals”, September 27).

It always amazes me that cuts and reductions in services are linked with modernisation and efficiency. Of course, we are told that this is not a cost-cutting exercise and the proposals are not determined by any financial considerations, but of course, they are, as otherwise everybody wold have access to a consultant led A&E department in their “local” hospital.

Two new hospitals have been built in the last few years, at a cost, no doubt, of many millions of pounds, in Ystrad Mynach and Mountain Ash.

But apart from being able to treat only the most minor of ailments and conditions, patients still have to travel further for treatment, despite having a brand new “hospital” on their doorstep. making these new hospitals nothing more than glorified doctor surgeries, and a waste of public money.


The proposals, we are told, will affect only a small percentage of patients, the sickest and most seriously injured. Oh well, that’s OK then! Only those who are at very real risk of death hanging around their shoulders will be affected. I’m sure those nearest and dearest to these people will be heartened by that.

Politicians are once again missing the point. The issues surrounding those with sickness and ill-health is not just about the treatment they receive. Where they receive it is often as important to eventual recovery.

None of us, including, our friends, and family want to travel for miles, very often on public transport, to receive life saving or life altering treatment. We want to be in familiar surroundings at this time and not have to worry about the logistics of getting to and from the hospital.

Even the Health Minister Lesley Griffiths said in the Senedd: “Patients need to have safe and sustainable services as close to home as possible.”

Reducing our access to essential services down to only four hospitals for the whole of South Wales is simply not providing this.

Money must be saved elsewhere – less consultation – perhaps on to smoke or not to smoke in hospital grounds for example or whether to remove snack vending machines.

The Health Minister must not forget that the raison d’etre of the NHS is to provide efficient health care, at the point of need, for the people. These new proposals could lead to unnecessary deaths at worst and at best a lot more aggravation and discomfort for those least able to handle it.

C Maskell

Nelson



Read More http://www.walesonline.co.uk/news/letters-to-the-editor/south-wales-echo-letters/2012/10/03/health-not-just-about-treatment-but-where-we-receive-it-91466-31952423/#ixzz28kWbpp1A

Saturday 6 October 2012

Glamorgan Gazette - 4/10/12



http://southwaleslibdems.org.uk/en/article/2012/618345/now-we-need-to-fight-to-keep-key-services-at-princess-of-wales-hospital

Now we need to fight to keep key services at Princess of Wales Hospital

October 4, 2012 10:45 PM
By Peter Black in Glamorgan Gazette
The recent announcement by the local health board that they wish to engage with the public on how to reorganise key hospital services in South Wales means that we will have to fight to keep those facilities at Princess of Wales Hospital.
The proposals affect four services, obstetrics, Accident and Emergency, neo-natal and in-patient paediatrics. At present all of these are provided at nine hospitals across South Wales, including Princess of Wales.
The health board now propose that patients will only be able to access these services in four or five centres. These are Cardiff, one of the Swansea hospitals, one of the Gwent hospitals, and either one or two of Merthyr Tydfil, Princess of Wales or the Royal Glamorgan in Llantrisant.
If Bridgend loses out to the other two hospitals in that race, it will mean that Princess of Wales will be significantly downgraded. It could mean that the Accident and Emergency department will become a nurse-led cuts and bruises unit similar to that operating in Neath Port Talbot Hospital. I do not know whether it will remain open 24 hours, seven days a week.
Furthermore, if obstetrics is lost from Princess of Wales Hospital then the 30% of expectant mothers who need an obstetrician present during labour will have to go to either Merthyr Tydfil or Llantrisant to give birth. Furthermore if a child is premature and needs intensive care, treatment will also have to take place at one of those two hospitals.
The health board engagement is to last 12 weeks and ends on 19th December following which they will put together proposals. A formal consultation will start in January..
The health board argue that these decisions are being driven by the need to deliver safe and secure services. However, accessibility must be taken into account. Local people deserve local services.
We cannot afford to have our hospital downgraded through the loss of important services. A 24 hours a day, 7 days a week, fully functional Accident and Emergency department is essential. We cannot expect sick or badly injured patients or expectant mothers to have to travel to Llantrisant or Merthyr Tydfi.
As yet there are no concrete proposals in front of us, just a statement of intent. That is why it is essential that as many local people engage with this process as possible. We need to fight to keep these services local and accessible to the people of Bridgend.
Tell them what you think at sendusyourviews@nhs.co.uk or write to ABMU Health Board, One Talbot Gateway, Baglan Energy Park, Port Talbot, SA12 7BR.

‘Cuts lunacy’ sparks petition on Facebook - Bridgend & Maesteg - South Wales Valleys - News from @walesonline

‘Cuts lunacy’ sparks petition on Facebook - Bridgend & Maesteg - South Wales Valleys - News from @walesonline

Welsh Assembly Petition

Fine words posted on our Facebook Page www.facebook.com/saveprincessofwales by Suzy Davies AM, supporting our campaign against the ludicrous proposals put forward under the tag "Changing for the better".

As a reminder to our friends in Royal Glamorgan, Llantrisant and Prince Charles, Merthyr Tydfil we must all stand united in our condemnation of these plans, to loose the proposed facilities in ANY of our hospitals would be catastrophic.

These are not specialist services for specialist centres - these are services people use everyday... A&E, consultant led maternity (obstetrics), neo natal and paediatric...

Can you imagine how many lives will be affected either in Bridgend, the Rhondda, Powys if these plans are pushed through - all in the name of progress.

Please sign our petition against the downgrading of Bridgend's Princess of Wales, and say NO to this proposed lunacy!

https://www.assemblywales.org/epetition-list-of-signatories.htm?pet_id=805

Why are patients faced with a future of fewer hospitals? - Health News - News from @walesonline

Why are patients faced with a future of fewer hospitals? - Health News - News from @walesonline

Friday 5 October 2012

Assembly Members

We are very pleased to have the backing of 3 local AM's Byron Davies, Peter Black and Suzy Davies have all pledged their support to our campaign against downgrading of local services. Thank you for your support.

Welcome to the Blog

Let me start by saying this is not an official Princess of Wales Hospital Page, the purpose of this page is to mobilise support against any future downgrade that may occur as part of the current review of Health Services in South Wales.

Nothing has been decided as yet, but whilst there is a period of engagement with the public over this issue I wanted to ensure the strength of feeling against these proposals is heard. Unfortunately for many reasons people will be unable to attend public consulation/engagement meetings, and therefore felt it was important that a page like this existed.

My name is Ian Spiller, I am not a part of the NHS or Princess of Wales Hospital, I am merely a member of the public, who, like you, will be affected by these changes. ABM Health Board believes that dangling a carrot regarding the possiblility of Princess of Wales becoming a regional centre of excellence is enough to prevent the current outcry against their policies, they are mistaken. The public are not fools!

Background:The five health boards in South Wales (Abertawe Bro Morgannwg, Aneurin Bevan, Cardiff and Vale, Cwm Taf and Powys) on 26th September 2012 launched a 12 week programme of engagement with the public to hear what people think about the issues facing some specialist hospital services in the region.The health boards have been working together to examine the issues facing consultant led obstetric, paediatric, neonatal and accident & emergency services in South Wales.In short this will mean the downgrading of 1 or 2 hospitals either the Princess of Wales, Bridgend, The Royal Glamorgan, Llantrisant or The Prince Charles, Merthyr Tydfil.The NHS in Wales is devolved which means decisions like this are made in Cardiff not in London, as an town/county borough, we must fight for our local services, and ensure our voices are heard. We must ensure our local politicians go to battle for us, to protect what is essential. In an emergency time is of the essence, we need more local services, better funded hospitals, more staff on wards. The answer is not to centralise and put lives in danger.

PLEASE JOIN OUR CAMPAIGN TO SAVE THE PRINCESS OF WALES FROM BEING DOWNGRADED!

Many Thanks
Ian Spiller