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Councils reject NHS plans due to ‘lack of confidence’

Councils reject NHS plans due to ‘lack of confidence’
30 November 2016



Two local councils have rejected regional plans on the future of the NHS because it is underdeveloped.

Shropshire Council and Telford and Wrekin Council in the West Midlands have said that they are “unlikely to approve the [sustainability and transformation plan] STP in its current form” because not enough resources were promised to community and primary care.

In a statement, the councils said that they believed resources should be put into primary care and community services, rather than into reconfiguring hospital services.

The Shropshire and Telford and Wrekin STP, which has a predicted deficit of £131.4m by 2021, is planning to reconfigure hospital services to create one centre of emergency care and another in “routine surgery or planned care”.

But following the STP’s publication on Monday, both councils said that they have been left “with a lack of confidence in the financial projections and the reliability of the rationale for future cost reductions”.

The councils’ statement said: “[I]t is the shared view that significantly more resources should be put into prevention and reconfiguration of community and primary care services, rather than reconfiguration of hospital services.”

Malcolm Pate, leader of Shropshire Council, said: “NHS England have instigated a “launch” of the STP, which suggests the plans have been fully worked through and agreed by all parties.

“Unfortunately, this is not the case, as it is the opinion of both Shropshire Council and Telford and Wrekin Council that some elements of the document need developing.”

But Shrewsbury and Telford Hospitals NHS Trust chief executive Simon Wright, who leads on the STP, said the plan was “not a final detailed plan of how we want to change things” but “represents the views and aspirations of the organisations involved”.

He said: “We will take all of these ideas to the patients who use our services and our own workforce. We’ll be talking more about this in the coming months [and] will only take forward proposals which will support the long-term future of our NHS and will benefit our patients.”

Although GPs were left out of the first six months of the planning process, NHS England has said it would not approve any plan that does not support general practice.

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