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Minutes:
The Chair invited the registered speakers to address the
Committee.
1.
Statement by Cllr Stefan Gawrysiak
Cllr Gawrysiak urged the Committee to ensure that the
topic of Short Stay Hub Beds in Henley was not lost, and that strong answers
needed to be provided to these questions. Accountability was imperative given
the lack of consultation regarding this matter.
Cllr Gawrysiak made the following points:
1.
In 2016 the Henley Step Down beds were NHS beds to relieve pressure on the
Royal Berks. These were provided by the Oxfordshire Clinical Commissioning
Group (OCCG) and were designated as permanent beds replacing the Peppard Ward
Beds. The reference for this would be David Smith OCCG and John Howell MP.
2.
In 2021 they were still permanent NHS Beds because a consultation was
had by Kate Teroni (OCCG Chief Executive) to remove the 4 RACU beds.
3.
Why had these permanent NHS Chiltern Court Beds been removed without
consultation with GP's, patient Groups, RBH, Henley Town Council,
Townlands Steering Group, and himself as County Councillor?
4.
If their status had changed from being NHS beds, then it needed to be
clarified when this change occurred as well as what consultation took place;
including Minutes and Agendas?
5.
These beds had been reduced from 125 to 63 and shortly to 40. Why had
this process occurred without consultation and without having a
geographical element?
6.
Why was it that South Oxfordshire, Thame, Henley, Wallingford, had no
beds at all?
8. How could it be right to place a vulnerable elderly
patient in Banbury some 45 Miles away? Was it expected for elderly family
members to catch a bus to see their loved ones?
9.
Cllr Gawrysiak asked for the evidence that the reduction of these beds
had been through the proper due process.
Cllr Gawrysiak emphasised that how could it be right to have
a policy that stated that SSHB provision could or should not be predicated on
some form of Geography, such that it left South Oxfordshire with no beds.
Cllr Gawrysiak questioned as to how it was right to provide beds in Banbury,
Chipping Norton, Oxford and Abingdon and not Henley/Thame/Wallingford/South
Oxfordshire.
2.
Statement by Janet Waters:
Janet explained
that she was chair of the Bell Surgery PPG, and that she also represented the
PPGs from the HenleySonNet PCN representing Bell, Hart, Sonning Common and
Nettlebed Surgeries. Janet outlined that she was well aware of the history of
the provision of Short Stay Hub Beds (SSHBs), having been a member of the
Townlands Stakeholder Reference Group which gathered data and information
concerning the use of the original 11 beds allocated to the Chiltern Court Care
Home.
Janet stated
that as representatives of patients in this PCN area, they objected to the
closure of the 7 SSHBs provided in Chiltern Court Henley. There had been no
communication or consultation before the final decision was taken. They were
presented with a final decision that would impact patients in South Oxfordshire
adversely. There may had been no legal requirement to consult; however, the
lack of engagement and communication led them to have a negative view of the
ICB and its provision of services. The target to reduce SSHBs by 50% in
Oxfordshire was inequitable, as it left South Oxfordshire with no provision at
all.
Janet stated
that she was aware of the national targets regarding patients being discharged
from acute settings to return home. The 95 % national target was not focussed
specifically on the frail and elderly and meeting their medical and care needs.
Care at home was indeed best, but only when the facilities were in place and if
patients could cope in this setting. Driving decisions around the SSHBs to meet
a national target was unacceptable to the local population that were benefiting
from the supporting step between hospital and home or another setting.
It was
understood that the target of 24-48 hours discharges from RBH or OUH was not
being met. There was a problem with discharge and the provision of care at
home. There had been a pilot, however,
the evidence of success had not been made known and patients who were frail and
elderly could not be at home for 3 days prior to assessment of their needs.
However, Janet explained that from first hand experience, it took 3 weeks and 5
phone calls to get a coordinator to visit her 97-year-old mother at home after
discharge from RBH after a hip operation last April. Janet was informed by the
Home First team that they could not meet the targets due to staffing issues and
there were too many demands on their services. The additional care hours that
were provided was welcomed. However, there was no evidence that the removal of
the SSHBs was safe and that it did not disadvantage patients.
The GPs
supporting patients at Chiltern Court advised that there was a high occupancy
in those beds and that there was a requirement for such a facility.
Other
initiatives such as Hospital at Home were welcomed. However, these new services
did not replace the need for patients to leave acute settings as soon as
possible and be helped to take the next step in their recovery through a SSHB
for a few weeks if required. This arrangement was still in place in other ICB
areas and offered comfort, support and recovery to the patient and their family
and friends. Why was Oxfordshire removing this important facility from so many
in South Oxfordshire?
Another issue
was the provision of SSHBs procured through ‘market factors’. This seemed like
cost cutting and the decision to take no account of area led to inequality of
provision and unacceptable levels of travel. The travel times by car, train and
bus for families, friends and carers to these locations were unacceptable to
their PCN area. Why was location not taken into account in the decision? How could these travel times be ignored in
the Impact assessments? A two-tier system existed, consisting of those that
could afford to pay post-acute discharge into a care facility to get back on
their feet and those that cannot pay. Patients were paying £10000 for two weeks
care and enablement post hip replacement as there was no one to care for them
at home. This is unfair if only those more affluent patients will be afforded
this facility.
Janet concluded
by asking for a reconsideration of the decision to close the beds and to review
the location of future provision. There was a great strength of feeling of
injustice in her PCN area as to how their patients would be supported
post-acute hospital discharge. No evidence had been seen that the resources and
provision will live up to the rhetoric.
3.
Statement by Robert Aitken:
Robert Aitken introduced himself as a resident of South
Oxfordshire living in Bix & Assendon, and as former Vice Chair of Bix &
Assendon Parish Council. He explained that he had a long participation with the
Townlands Steering Group, and was a trustee of the League of Friends of
Townlands Hospital as well as an Ambulance Service Community Responder for
nearly 10 years.
Robert objected to the proposed closure of the SSHBs in
Henley and fully supported Councillor Gawrysiack’s efforts to have this
decision deferred to allow proper consultation. This decision was taken without
any communication, let alone consultation, with local interest groups, the
community, or even GP surgeries. The existing bed hub had been well used and
was valued by local GPs. The argument put forward against consultation was that
it was not needed as the beds’ contract was with Oxfordshire County Council, so
not NHS beds. The beds were a direct replacement for NHS beds in the old
Townlands Hospital under an NHS contract; if that was subsequently switched,
that too was without communication or consultation; and the beds continued to
function as step down NHS beds.
The sole justification appeared to be to fulfil a national
target, effectively that no more than 5% of hospital discharges be to bed hubs
or equivalent. This was an arbitrary nationwide target, and may or may not had
been right as such, but for it to be a prescriptive local requirement
irrespective of clinical need was inappropriate.
Furthermore, the implication that a small minority would
require a step-down bed was not being respected for this large area of South
Oxfordshire, as it would have zero beds. There was no guarantee of space in
alternatives which were getting squeezed too. In any event they were not close
enough for family participation in the recovery.
Robert understood that the enhanced Care in the Home Service
to support this was not fully in place, let alone trialled, when this decision
was taken. Since then, Government decisions to increase the minimum wage,
resulting in further unfunded pressure on local authorities, and new limits on
legal immigration of care workers’ families, were likely to put further
pressure on the labour-intensive home care system.
Robert asked the Committee to imagine the situation of an
elderly person, possibly themself a carer, being discharged from hospital with
a spouse unable to care for a rehabilitating partner, or with no-one at home.
The idea of servicing this rehabilitating minority only via an uncertain
drop-in care service did not bear thinking about.
Failure to get this right would be hugely detrimental to
those patients affected and to the functioning of the main hospitals left with
further bed blocking pressure.
Robert concluded with the following questions:
Ø
Why had there been no prior consultation, and
why the subsequent refusal by NHS representatives to engage except at the most
minimal level?
Ø
What evidence was there that this decision,
supporting data, and its implications had been fully exposed to and approved by
HOSC?
4.
Statement by Victoria Wright:
Victoria
introduced herself as having worked in the public sector for over 15 years,
having also been involved in spending review submissions and strategic
planning. Therefore, she was fully aware of the austerity measures for the last
12 years, and the impacts this has had on buying power in terms of number of
staff due to salary increases, and the rising costs of consumables and capital
equipment. The NHS had not been immune to this, and the comments she was making
were her personal opinions being grounded in the experience working in the
public sector. Victoria became a member of the Wantage Town Council Health
Committee in May 2023, and had been involved in the co-production exercise
around the future of Wantage Community Hospital ever since. Victoria was
impressed by the willingness of the Health partners to creatively develop a
future for the local healthcare provision. This could not have been easy given
the existing constraints, that they had come with ideas in relation to how they
could work within the aforementioned constraints.
Throughout the
Public Engagement Exercise, a number of stakeholder meetings were held, through
which it became clear that there were 4 distinct needs for health services
within Wantage:
1. Maternity
Provision.
2. Access
to local palliative care beds.
3. Access
to Urgent Care through a Minor Injuries or First Aid Unit.
4. Access
to local outpatient appointment following the success of the Pilot Schemes.
The above
options were examined in detail by the NHS as well as by the Sub-Committee, and
the NHS outlined that there were constraints around current workforce in
specific areas as well as in funding for some options at this particular point
in time. For instance, not only were the capital costs for a walk-in X-Ray
facility unavailable at this time, but there was also a shortage of
radiographers.
It was clear through
discussions that both the size of the estate and the capital running cost would
prevent all 4 of the aforementioned options happening within the Hospital.
Victoria believed that the co-produced report provided a pragmatic and
realistic set of recommendations on what could be provided at this point in
time to provide the hospital with a sustainable future within the current
funding constraints. The NHS had made an effort to ensure that the local
community had been engaged in the co-production process thus far, including
members of the co-production team standing in the market square to speak to
residents; and that they had offered to continue engagements in the coming
year. The engagements with Verve Consultants was also a useful addition to this
process. At the local public meeting that was held the week prior to the HOSC
meeting, residents raised concerns that some options were not being provided
for given the growing population in Wantage. This was covered in the motion
passed unanimously by the Town Council.
Victoria urged
the Committee to consider this motion, and in particular, to consider the part
of the report that mentions there would be ongoing considerations to Urgent
Care and to a local offer of palliative care. Overall, the co-production
exercise was a positive process with good engagement from the NHS. Victoria
welcomed firm commitments from the NHS to explore all the recommendations, and
expressed that it was not advisable to refer this matter to the Secretary Of
State for Health and Social Care at this time, as doing so would add
significant delays and lead to a likely loss of CIL (Community Infrastructure
Levy) funding, which was the only source of capital funding at this time. A
referral would prevent modernisation and keep the hospital in a temporary and
insecure future.