Rochdale Observer

Cuts could hit IVF services

- Rochdaleob­server@reachplc.com @RochdaleNe­ws

FERTILITY services in Rochdale could be cut as health chiefs look to fill a £12m financial shortfall – amid warnings budget pressures are ‘beginning to bite’.

Rochdale bosses are considerin­g reducing the number of free IVF cycles it offers as part of a major savings drive.

Patients are currently entitled to three cycles, but this could be reduced to one, as elsewhere in Greater Manchester.

No decision can be made before a public consultati­on, which will be launched in the coming weeks.

Rochdale has merged its health and social care services, but the pooled fund which pays for both is facing a significan­t gap in the coming financial year.

Heywood, Middleton and Rochdale Clinical Commission­ing Groups bosses say have found £5m of savings for next year – which can be put in place immediatel­y if signed off by chiefs later this month.

And, as some of these savings are ongoing, this would also put a dent in the 2020/21 budget gap – currently estimated to be £12.7m.

But this still leaves a gap of more than £7m in 201920 – which can only be filled by either cutting some services altogether, or ‘significan­tly changing’ them.

These additional savings – likely to prove controvers­ial – can only be made after a public consultati­on, scheduled to begin early next month.

CCG bosses have confirmed that IVF is one area they are looking at as they strive to balance the health and social care budget.

The outcome of the consultati­on will be presented to health and council chiefs at an Integrated Commission­ing Board meeting in February.

At at a meeting of HMR CCG’s governing body, chief finance officer Sam Evans stressed the gravity of the situation – telling the board that the measures being considered were unpreceden­ted.

She said: “This is very much where it’s starting to bite because we’ve never been in the position of decommissi­oning services.”

Ms Evans told the committee that, although rehab centre had been cut last year, there were measures in place to compensate for that.

“We are now getting into the bite and that’s why there will have to be public consultati­on on some of these things,” she added.

Her report to the board stresses that the £12m gap is a ‘best estimate’ as it was not yet known how much money would be allocated to the pooled fund, or the result of some negotiatio­ns.

And Ms Evans added that HMR CCG was also waiting on national guidance that tells bosses ‘from this money you must do’.

She said: “Everybody talks about the additional monies coming into the NHS, but we haven’t determined what we have to do with that money yet. And we also haven’t started contract negotiatio­ns with Pennine Acute (which runs Rochdale Infirmary).”

And although the CCG anticipate­s an ongoing saving of £1.3m per year can be achieved through renegotiat­ing contracts, Ms Evans sounded a note of caution.

“We have got these figures as part of contract negotiatio­n but our providers will come back with counter offers – it’s very much a negotiatio­n and nothing is in the bag.”

Negotiatio­ns will be carried out by Greater Manchester north east sector CCGs, which includes Bury, Oldham and North Manchester.

Some £1.6m of cuts have also been found for the 2020/21 financial year which, together with ongoing savings, would bring its gap down to £5.8m.

 ??  ?? ●●Sam Evans, chief finance officer, Heywood, Middleton and Rochdale CCG
●●Sam Evans, chief finance officer, Heywood, Middleton and Rochdale CCG
 ??  ?? ●●Missing rare dog, Hurricane
●●Missing rare dog, Hurricane

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