Where I Live RSS Feed


St Helier Hospital must cut £57m in 5 years

St Helier Hospital must cut £57m in 5 years St Helier Hospital must cut £57m in 5 years

The extent of the cuts St Helier hospital faces have emerged this week with cuts of up to £57m expected.

South-west London’s four main hospital providers must deliver £370m cuts by 2016-17.

Of that total, St Helier must save £57m and Epsom General must save £30m.

The rest will be made up by St George’s, Kingston, and Croydon University hospital.

This means a 24 per cent reduction in spending for all the hospitals.

The NHS Better Services, Better Value review is overseeing how this financial challenge facing the NHS in south-west London will be carried out.

St Helier Hospital suffered a severe blow last week after St George’s, in Tooting, withdrew its bit to run it.

St George’s said it was pulling out due to financial challenges and the uncertainties surrounding the outcome of the review.

Last week, Siobhain McDonagh, MP for Mitcham and Morden, accused doctors leading the review of overstating the need to move services from hospitals into the community.

She said they had contributed to the collapse of a planned merger and left huge questions over St Helier’s future.

This week she said figures showed rising demand for accident and emergency and maternity services at St Helier and its neighbouring hospitals.

She said: “The review is about money. If you are planning to take £40m out of St Helier you seriously undermine its viability.”

Matthew Hopkins, the trust’s chief executive, said nationally the NHS needed to save £20bn in productivity improvements by 2015.

However, he said it was wrong to jump to conclusions about the future of St Helier Hospital and the services it provided.

He said the hospital was popular and the trust had major plans in place to spend more than £219m redeveloping it.

Related links

No recommendations have yet been made about the future shape of services in south-west London.

A meeting of the St Helier transaction board took place on Tuesday, February 7.

Health bosses met to consider how to rekindle the hospital’s bid for foundation status, which was thought to be unachievable through its current partnership with Epsom Hospital.

St Helier has been given a six-month extension on their deadline and should become a foundation trust by September 2014.

Comments(3)

theavengers says...
12:00pm Thu 9 Feb 12

Translation--people will die to save money. Thanks a lot. The rich policitians will retain private healthcare and we can all go die, just as long as we still pay a high rate of tax and take nothing in return for it.

Smudger says...
12:05pm Thu 9 Feb 12

This is crazy. The government has an ideological agenda to reduce the NHS to almost nothing and put healthcare into the hands of their friends in business. We could afford this if we chose to, and if we taxed the rich fairly. People will die, lives will be of poorer quality than they need to be, people will suffer more for the sake of profit for the medicare companies.

tjames says...
6:44am Sat 11 Feb 12

nhs is very poor value for money

click2find

Most popular


About cookies

We want you to enjoy your visit to our website. That's why we use cookies to enhance your experience. By staying on our website you agree to our use of cookies. Find out more about the cookies we use.

I agree