Caernarfon Herald

‘Concerned’ Betsi chairman warning of a £35m deficit

SENIOR GROUPS SET UP TO FIND SAVINGS ‘NOT MEETING ENOUGH’

- Liam Randall

THE chairman of North Wales’ crisis-hit health board has voiced his frustratio­n as it looks set to incur a deficit of £35m this year.

Betsi Cadwaladr University Health Board has been in special measures since 2015 and has faced increasing scrutiny over its poor financial performanc­e.

The trust experience­d a shortfall of just over £41m in the last financial year and while this year’s figure is expected to be lower, it’s still £10m above the target set by the Welsh Government.

Speaking at a meeting on Thursday former North Wales Police chief constable Mark Polin said he was not confident it would meet the goal.

Mr Polin (pictured), who took up the lead role on the board last year, also expressed concerns after discoverin­g some groups of senior officials set up to come up with savings ideas were failing to meet on a regular basis.

He said: “We currently are not on track to deliver the original deficit target of £25m in part because expenditur­e is burning more quickly than the savings programme. “The financial advisor who is retained by me describes a real concern about improvemen­t groups. “As I understand it, the workforce one hasn’t met, or if it has then it’s only met once.

“Bearing in mind that your expenditur­e is running through the roof, we’ve got concerns about savings plans.

“I’m not sure what confidence we can gain in the current situation.”

In June, a statement was issued by the Welsh Health Minister in which he outlined his own concerns about the board’s money problems.

Vaughan Gething said he was disappoint­ed Betsi Cadwaladr had failed to achieve its deficit target for 2018/19.

According to a report presented to board members, the trust has already overspent by £14.6m this year, which is £3m higher than anticipate­d.

The main reasons are said to be a failure to achieve savings and excess spending on the use of agency staff in secondary care.

A recovery plan has now been put in place in a bid to meet the latest goal set by the Welsh Government.

Chief executive Gary Doherty said the board had an obligation to cut back on expenditur­e by as much as possible.

He highlighte­d a case where staff helped to achieve savings of £140,000 by reducing the amount of antibiotic­s given to patients.

He said: “We have a big ask this year to go from £41.3m to £25m, but fundamenta­lly there are big opportunit­ies for us.

“Every penny that we can reduce our expenditur­e by appropriat­ely is a penny we are duty bound and should put all our efforts into delivering. We met one of the teams which has done some work around infection control and they’ve saved £140,000 by not giving antibiotic­s to patients who don’t need them.”

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