The Scotsman

Brown backs hospital that saved his sight

- By IAN SWANSON

Gordon brown has given his backing to a campaign for a new eye hospital to replace the one where his own sight was saved.

The former prime minister said he had been a regular visitor to Edinburgh’s Eye Pavilion over its 50-year existence and that it must be replaced.

He called on the Scottish Government to “end the ambiguity” over its plans and commit to a facility in the city.

Mr Brown’s sight was saved by surgeons at the pavilion.

Former prime minister Gordon Brown – whose sight was saved by surgeons at Edinburgh's Eye Pavilion – has backed the campaign for a new eye hospital to be built next to the Royal Infirmary.

Mr Brown said he had been a regular visitor to the Princess Alexandra Eye Pavilion over its 50-year existence but it now urgently needed to be replaced.

And he called on the Scottish Government to “end the ambiguity” over its plans and commit to a new hospital at Little France.

His interventi­on, just days before the Holyrood elections, comes as Dr Hector Chawla, the consultant responsibl­e for the sight-saving surgery in 1971, sets out in today’s Scotsman why the proposal to disperse services, put forward by the government as an alternativ­e to a new hospital, would not work.

The government told NHS Lothian in December it would not fund a new hospital “now or in the foreseeabl­e future” despite agreeing in principle to the project in 2018 and allowing more than £1 million to be spent on planning the new building.

Instead, it said NHS Lothian should review eyecare services, suggesting community optometris­ts could take a bigger role and operations could be carried out at a new elective centre in Livingston yet to be built.

The decision caused a public outcry and prompted crossparty calls for a rethink. The SNP manifesto now includes a pledge to “replace” the Eye Pavilion but First Minister Nicola Sturgeon has indicated the review will still play a crucial role in what actually happens.

In his Scotsman article, Dr Chawla, former director of the Eye Pavilion, accuses the government of being prepared to preside over the destructio­n of a centre of excellence and describes the proposed dispersal model as “a medley of the old measures already in action and new measures that won’t work”.

Mr Brown said: "A new hospital is needed to replace the old building that is now more than 50 years old and was built for a different era of patient care."

"My sight was saved by the skills of medical staff, led by Dr Chawla, at the Princess Alexandra Eye Pavilion and, as a patient who has not only been operated on in the hospital but regularly visited it over its whole 50 year history, I know the value of a specialist hospital whose unique facilities and clinical expertise serve the whole region, including Fife and the Borders but which is in urgent need of upgrading.

"What it offers is so critical and its specialism­s so important to patient care that when we saw it was underfunde­d and lacked the most up-to-date equipment, a group of patients and supporters raised money to donate the latest machine able to photograph retinas in meticulous detail and identify a range of eye conditions from diabetes to detached retinas."

"But only the Scottish Government can finance the building of a new hospital and Ministers should end the ambiguity of their announceme­nts which cast doubt on how independen­t their review is, and commit to a new hospital hopefully on the Little France site where the new Royal Infirmary now stands."

 ?? Picture: Alex Hewitt ?? 0 Gordon Brown with Dr Hector Chawla, the consultant responsibl­e for the surgery that saved the former prime minister’s sight in 1971.
Picture: Alex Hewitt 0 Gordon Brown with Dr Hector Chawla, the consultant responsibl­e for the surgery that saved the former prime minister’s sight in 1971.

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