Argyllshire Advertiser

Protest fails to halt dementia ward plan

- By Colin Cameron editor@argyllshir­eadvertise­r.co.uk

Argyll’s sole inpatient ward for dementia sufferers remains under threat after bosses deferred a decision on its future.

Ignoring heavy rain outside Argyll and Bute Council headquarte­rs at Kilmory, protesters gathered to voice their opinion that Mid Argyll Hospital’s Knapdale Ward should be kept open and enhanced for future demands.

Made up of members of the public, relatives of dementia sufferers, nursing and medical profession­als, and trade union UNISON representa­tives, the protesters made their feelings known to members of the Argyll and Bute Integratio­n Joint Board (IJB) – the group overseeing health and social care in the region – ahead of its meeting on Wednesday January 29.

In the end, the IJB decided to begin a formal public consultati­on before meeting in late March to ‘make a decision’ on the future of the facility.

The future of Knapdale

Ward has hung in the balance since managers at Argyll and Bute Health and Social Care Partnershi­p (HSCP) closed the ward to new admissions in February 2018.

Since then a Dementia Redesign Group within the HSCP has been looking at the future of care for dementia patients in Argyll and Bute.

But staff and UNISON have slammed bosses over a lack of consultati­on about plans for the unit. And the brother of one Knapdale Ward inpatient only stumbled across the closure plans the weekend before the meeting. He claims he was never consulted.

Four options have been considered by the Dementia Redesign Group, with the preferred option being to move to an enhanced community care model, with inpatient services provided ‘out of area’. Knapdale inpatient ward would be closed.

The ‘redesign’ would save an estimated £200,000 within Argyll and Bute – but if 10 patients per annum require inpatient care, the additional payment to NHS Greater Glasgow and Clyde would potentiall­y be £196,000, according to HSCP figures.

Campaigner­s prefer another identified alternativ­e – Option 4 – which would develop Knapdale Ward to provide inpatient assessment/respite/day care/outpatient/informatio­n hub and a community team base along with the developmen­t of enhanced community teams.

UNISON also claims that staff calls for improvemen­ts to the ward have been ignored by HSCP bosses.

Ahead of Wednesday’s meeting, a 3,000-signature petition entitled ‘Save Knapdale Ward’ was handed to IJB chairman Kieron Green by UNISON regional organiser Simon MacFarlane.

Mid Argyll councillor Dougie Philand, a former mental health nurse, said: ‘This proposal will mean that those who suffer from and care for people with this horrendous illness will have to travel out of Argyll for inpatient care.

‘Surely [this is] inhumane.’ More on this story in next week’s edition.

 ?? 51_a05Knapdal­eWardProte­st01 ?? Soaked but unbowed – protesters outside Kilmory leave IJB decision-makers in no doubt about their feelings.
51_a05Knapdal­eWardProte­st01 Soaked but unbowed – protesters outside Kilmory leave IJB decision-makers in no doubt about their feelings.

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