Manchester Evening News

THE HEALTH OF OUR A&Es IN WAKE OF HEALTH DEVOLUTION

BUT QUESTIONS RAISED OVER WHETHER GOVERNMENT GAVE REGION ENOUGH MONEY TO OPERATE DEVOLVED SERVICE

- By JENNIFER WILLIAMS jennifer.williams@men-news.co.uk @jenwilliam­smen

TWO years after Greater Manchester signed its ground-breaking health devolution deal the region has been ordered to improve its A&Es by government, the M.E.N. can reveal.

Latest figures show all but one of our hospital trusts are missing emergency targets laid down by Whitehall under 2016’s deal.

Several local hospitals are also facing massive deficits while Greater Manchester councils have raided £66m in reserves this year to fund social care.

It is a situation that has raised significan­t questions over whether ministers gave our region enough money to pay for the new system in the first place.

One hospital trust has described ‘extreme’ and ‘immense strain’ on its A&E because of rising numbers of frail, elderly patients with complex conditions requiring a lot of medical attention and a longer stay in hospital.

One shadow minister warned the government must pay for NHS devolution properly if they want it to work.

In some areas exhausted staff, completely committed to their communitie­s, are struggling to cope.

Greater Manchester’s devolved health system took effect on April 1, 2016, with its terms stating that 85pc of patients must be seen at A&E within four hours.

Below that level, government has the option to ‘step in’ and take the reins.

Despite a range of other improvemen­ts since devolution – including in cancer and stroke care – in February the region’s figure stood at 83pc.

Two local trusts, Stockport and Wigan, ranked in the bottom 10 per cent of performers nationally.

Jon Rouse, the region’s chief health officer, confirmed that, theoretica­lly, national health bosses could ultimately choose to intervene as a result.

He said: “There are trigger points within the system which if we fall below – depending how far we fall below – NHS England can either request an improvemen­t plan or, in extremis, they could decide to intervene and step in to the situation.”

Greater Manchester had been in breach of its four-hour target ‘for some time,’ he said, adding that while its performanc­e was not unusual in terms of the national picture, its devolution deal makes it unique.

“Only Greater Manchester is under a devolution agreement with this type of accountabi­lity standard and I think NHS England have made a judgement that it’s reasonable to ask us for an improvemen­t plan,” Mr Rouse said. “Given that we’re not behaving very differentl­y from the rest of the country, I don’t think they’re in a position where they’re considerin­g ‘step-in,’ but they want to know what we’re doing to try to improve the situation. “And from my perspectiv­e that’s fair enough.” The ‘principal driver’ of the situation had been high numbers of medically sick patients needing urgent hospital care, he said, adding: “The issue is the number of people with high acuity coming in the front door over the winter period.”

However, he pointed to three underlying challenges faced by the region in improving emergency waiting times.

Many of Greater Manchester’s A&E units are ageing and physically too cramped, he said, and while some ‘little bits of capital funding here and there’ have been provided by government, a new bid for money is now being drawn up so the department­s can handle ‘a totally different number of people.’

“Some of the A&E department­s are just too small for the number of attendance­s and the patients with high acuity

coming through them and that is a real problem,” he said. At the same time, in common with other parts of the country, Greater Manchester had struggled to recruit frontline staff, he said, adding: “The third issue is our overall financial situation.”

Four trusts – Stockport, Tameside and Glossop, Pennine Acute and the mental health provider Pennine Care – are facing particular­ly major financial challenges, he said.

Tameside reported a £22m deficit at its last board meeting, while Pennine Acute’s North Manchester General was looking at a £13m shortfall.

Mental health provider Pennine Care has not published its papers for March.

Board papers for Stockport NHS Foundation Trust, which runs Stepping Hill hospital and has consistent­ly struggled with A&E targets in recent years, show it projecting a £36m deficit next year, which will see it rely on emergency financial funding via NHS Improvemen­t.

They also show the scale of the pressure faced by its A&E department.

“The trust has continued to experience extreme challenges to operationa­l performanc­e with significan­tly high levels of attendance in the emergency department in recent weeks,” reads an update to the board from its chair last week.

“This has resulted in exceptiona­l strain on services which led to the medical director to take the reluctant, but necessary, decision to cancel a number of clinics and temporaril­y suspend training in order to maximize the clinical resource available to manage patient flow. The consequenc­e of these challenges on our performanc­e against the A&E four-hour standard is starkly reported elsewhere in the board papers.” A spokesman for Stockport NHS Foundation Trust said its hospital has been ‘under immense strain for some time now.’ “A&E numbers are up by 8pc and many of our patients are frail and elderly, with complex conditions that require a lot of medical attention and a longer stay in hospital,” she added. “We have become better and faster at coping with the surge in demand, and opened extra beds, but there is no easy solution. “We are sorry that despite the huge efforts of our hard working staff, only 65.3pc of A&E patients were admitted to a bed within four hours last month. It is important to point out however that everyone is receiving safe care.” The trust is also making ‘continuous’ savings and trying to treat more people at home, she added. Ever since the devolution deal was signed, many senior political figures have feared it could be undermined by lack of cash, particular­ly in the face of the ongoing squeeze in council-funded social care.

Barbara Keeley, Labour’s shadow minister for social care and MP for Worsley and Eccles South, said devolution

The issue is the number of people with high acuity coming in the front door over the winter period Jon Rouse

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 ??  ?? Chief health officer Jon Rouse
Chief health officer Jon Rouse
 ??  ?? MP Barbara Keeley
MP Barbara Keeley

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