Showing posts with label Haltwhistle Hospital. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Haltwhistle Hospital. Show all posts

Monday, 16 March 2015

Haltwhistle Hospital opening today shows NHS/ LA Integrated healthcare at its best

I will be at the Hospital at 10.30 today celebrating the formal opening by the Duchess of Northumberland and, more importantly, the progress of integrated healthcare here in the north east. There is so much to be proud of. For too long under successive governments healthcare has existed in silos - this is now changing. If you want an example of an integrated hospital with NHS And LA care, on different floors of the same building, with local doctor involvement then Haltwhistle is the country's leading example. I am looking forward to chatting to the local nurses, doctors and GPs who will be there.
more details on the long journey from a hospital knocked down and then rebuilt can be found here: http://www.hexhamcourant.co.uk/news/haltwhistle-hospital-makes-progress-1.1104062

But it does not end there. As last week the announcement was made about the Vanguard pilots. Again this is integration on a wider level.

The NHS has chosen the first 29 ‘vanguard’ geographies across the UK that will take the national lead on transforming care for patients in towns, cities and counties across England. The only one leading the way In the north east is in Northumberland; groups of nurses, doctors and other health staff from across the country put forward their ideas for how they want to redesign care in their areas, and then helped choose the first 29 of the most innovative plans.

Drawing on a new £200 million transformation fund and tailored national support, from April the vanguards will develop local health and care services to keep people well, and bring home care, mental health and community nursing, GP services and hospitals together for the first time since 1948.

For patients, this will lead to a significant improve in their experience of health services. It is estimated more than five million patients will benefit, just from this first wave. For example, this could mean: fewer trips to hospitals as cancer and dementia specialists and GPs work in new teams; a single point of access for family doctors, community nurses, social and mental health services; and access to tests, dialysis or chemotherapy much closer to home.

Saturday, 11 January 2014

The Weekend Read: Hospitals, A&E and the NHS

I was granted just 4 minutes by the Speaker to address this important topic, shortly before Christmas; I set out my thoughts on local hospital healthcare provision in short form:

Meeting the wonderful Elsie at Hexham Hospital

As a jockey, I spent far too much time in A and E departments after coming off race horses.

Once, I wandered into hospital with a broken collarbone and four bones sticking out of my shoulder. On another occasion, I spent a long time with a cut kidney and lost a spleen at Warwick hospital—I thank Dr Mike Stellakis, and his team, for saving my life that night. Also, two years ago, I collapsed in the House and spent a night in St Thomas’ with a young but capable bunch of A and E doctors. I thank them all and put on the record this Christmas the huge effort made by all our public sector staff, particularly in the NHS.

In Northumberland, we feel that we are leading the way in health care provision. Begun under the previous Government, that has continued under this one. Haltwhistle is a small cottage hospital that in the olden days would have been shut, but which now is being rebuilt as an integrated NHS and local authority facility. It is the first of its kind in the country; it is utterly transformative and it is exactly what the NHS and the local authority should be doing with old buildings, although I urge the trust to resolve the contracts that are not yet resolved. When I visited it last week, however, I saw that it was a truly innovative building and that it would be a great addition.

Hexham A and E is also a fantastic building. This November, I worked there as a hospital porter, and I thank Barry, the head porter, who has worked there 31 years, for keeping me in line and ensuring I did not put anything in the wrong place. Then there is Cramlington, an innovative, pre-Keogh assessment health care centre being built for the north-east. It is a perfect example of where we should be going: a 24-hour, seven-day-a-week, consultant-led facility. As an A and E specialist care facility, it is exactly what Keogh is talking about. Interestingly, it was planned under the previous Government and is being brought forward under this one. It is exactly the direction we should be heading in.
I shall deal briefly with another issue. Northumbria has outstanding health care, but sadly North Cumbria is having some difficulties, and I urge the Secretary of State to expedite the merger of Northumbria and North Cumbria NHS trusts as soon as possible.

I turn now to ways we can keep our constituents and patients out of A and E. I have no spleen—it was kicked out of me by a three-mile chaser at Stratford—so every year I need the flu jab. Consequently, like pensioners, some young children and vulnerable adults, I went to get my flu jab last month at Haltwhistle GP centre. I thank Sarah Speed—it was not painful and took only five minutes. Tragically, however, at least 10% to 20% of the population do not take up the flu jab and are therefore likely to end up in A and E over the winter or possibly die. As constituency MPs, we must ram home their failure to take up the opportunity to deal with their own health care.

Finally, I turn to the hospice and dementia care systems in Northumberland. In the Charlotte Straker hospice and Tynedale Hospice at Home, we have two outstanding hospices, both of which I have assisted and one of which I have fundraised for. Both do a great job keeping people out of hospital. I should also mention the Age UK programme dealing with elderly people in my constituency. It is making a huge difference and ensuring that everyone becomes a dementia friend. Only through such actions will we bring about real change in our health care system.

Monday, 30 December 2013

2013 in review - September, October, November + December


Locally in September I did everything from the Macmillan coffee morning in Heddon, to the Sill project launch, to the great Scottish campaign week, designed to ensure that Scotland stays part of the UK. 


I spoke at events all over - from Aberdeenshire to Loch Lomond to Tweeddale and beyond. It was a fascinating week and well worth the efforts. 

October saw us full on back in parliament but I still managed to get home to make the Tynedale Hospice at Home charity fundraiser at Hexham.

In November we made skills and apprenticeships our priority and I helped Michael Egger open his new engineering academy. You can read my keynote speech on skills and apprenticeships in the House of Commons here: http://www.theyworkforyou.com/whall/?id=2013-11-27a.93.0&s=speaker%3A24962#g93.1

Also this winter we have spent huge amounts of time supporting our NHS - whether it is my two visits to Haltwhistle Hospital [middle picture, with Local Councillor Ian Hutchinson], portering in Hexham hospital [pictured below with Barry, the head porter]or spending a half day with the team at the Haltwhistle GP clinic, along with multiple other visits and meetings with our Ambulance Service, Commissioning Group, NHS Trust and all the key workers who make the NHS what it is today. I never forget I owe my life several times over to the NHS.

Monday, 4 November 2013

Haltwhistle Hospital rebuild coming along - North East healthcare leading the way

10 days ago I popped by the Haltwhistle Hospital with local councillor, Ian Hutchinson, to see how the rebuild was coming along. It is great to see the new hospital taking shape. It will be the first integrated facility with both a hospital and local authority care on site. This integrated care is what everyone is seeking and I am really pleased the Northumbria NHS Trust are leading the way.    
The £4.6million Haltwhistle scheme will have 12 extra-care flats with support for tenants on the ground floor, to replace the residential care service previously delivered at Greenholme, and 15 hospital beds on the first floor to provide rehabilitation support and care for elderly patients.

The local community were given the opportunity to give their views on a name for the extra-care flats and the hospital and engagement sessions were held in early October; a final decision will be made on the names later in the year. I will keep you posted and intend to try and revisit the hospital before christmas to check on progress and again talk to residents in the surrounding area.