Express & Star

MP urges hospital to take financial help

Stafford MP Jeremy Lefroy has urged hospital bosses to 'get the help they need' to move out of financial special measures.

Published

The MP said that he believed the hospital 'expected' to be placed into a special measures by NHS Improvement (NHSI), a department set up to aid ‘rapid financial improvement’ and said he has 'no problem' with it, providing services don't suffer.

The trust was placed in special financial measures last week because it has missed its savings target, reportedly by £40 million.

Now that the NHSI has stepped in, the trust will be supported in reducing agency staff spending and ensuring staff are ‘paid appropriately’ for the work they do.

It will also receive help with planning staff rotas more effectively.

The trust’s chief executive Paula Clark, who took over the reigns at the troubled trust last year, welcomed NHSI’s ‘extra support’.

Fears have been raised in the last few months over the future of the A&E service after the five-year Sustainability and Transformation Plan (STP) for Staffordshire was published in December, revealing that one of the county’s three A&Es would be downgraded to urgent care centre.

Mr Lefroy said: "I spoke with Paula Clark just after the announcement was made regarding the trust being placed in special measures.

"She re-iterated to me that there are absolutely no plans to close down the A&E department, which I was grateful to hear.

"I think to some extent the trust had been expecting to be put into special measures so it was no great surprise.

"I would urge that they do get the help they need in order to move out of special measures and as long as they do, I have no problem with this."

County Hospital’s A&E has been closed overnight since December 2011, and is currently open between 8am and 10pm.

Campaigners have called for a round-the-clock service to be restored, especially in light of missed A&E performance targets at Royal Stoke University Hospital.

The calls grew louder when Health Secretary Jeremy Hunt vowed to consider it, providing the move could be done safely, before the last General Election.

But a formal decision has never materialised.

Paula Clark, Chief Executive of UHNM, said: “County Hospital is an integral part of the UHNM family, and our A&E offers a high quality and valued service to local people.

“We have no plans to close it and have invested in a refurbishment this financial year as part of an on-going improvement programme."