How to take part in the DOH Hospital Network Consultation with Suggested Responses (Updated! 23.02.2025)

Daisy Hill Acute Hospital, Newry is entitled to be an Area Hospital due to the consistently high population size, need and land mass area in Newry & District. In the Department of Health’s new public Consultation ‘Hospitals – Creating a Network for better outcomes’, Daisy Hill Acute Hospital has been put into the wrong Hospital category of ‘General Hospital’.

Public help is needed to answer through the Questionnaire to put the case forward to the Department of Health through the Public consultation process for Daisy Hill to be made an Area Hospital, like the other Area Hospitals, as it is entitled to be.

You can help by responding to this Department of Health Consultation ‘Hospitals – Creating a Network for better outcomes.’ (October 2024) (More information on the topic is explored in ‘Why This Consultation Matters section below.

Word versions of the Questionnaire with some pre-filled selected options to read or use for your own answers, (now with extra info on the Rural Needs and Equality Questions) are available to download by clicking on the Download buttons below : (File name: V3 Extra info-Questionnaire-doh -hospitals) has detailed LONGER answers.

A word version of the Questionnaire with SHORTER ANSWERS (File name ‘W shorter-questionnaire -doh-hospitals) with some pre-filled selected options to read or use for your own answers is available to download by clicking on the Download button below.

>If you use this pre-filled version you will first need to save the file to your phone/computer/device etc), Select the Save As Option, and select where you want to save it in Downloads/Documents etc.

>Then give it a new filename by adding your initials at the front/end or some other change to the standard name.

Example 1. New file name: AB questionnaire doh-hospitals-better-outcomes.

Example 2. New file name: questionnaire doh-hospitals-better-outcomesRR1

>Edit the new version by starting with Q1 to add your name and Q2 to add your Email address by typing into the Space in the Answer Boxes on the Questionnaire. This is really important so the department will count it as a real response coming from you. (There is space to add extra comments on some of the other answer boxes if you wish. )

>When you are finished Save your file again and then your version of the Questionnaire is ready. This new filename is the version you can send as an email attachment, (or for printing, if you want to post it.)

Ways to respond are detailed below.

Daisy Hill Hospital Newry is entitled to be an Area Hospital in the Department of Health Hospital Network Consultation 2024-2025.

DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH CONSULTATION LINKS

https://www.health-ni.gov.uk/consultations/hospitals-creating-network-better-outcomes-public-consultation

The link above is the main Consultation link from the Department of Health website for the ‘Creating a Network for better outcomes’ Consultation . It gives all documents including main report, Rural Impact and Equality Impact Assessments,  Consultation Questionnaire Word document all available to download and read.

WAYS TO RESPOND TO THE CONSULTATION

There are 3 WAYS TO RESPOND to Department of Health Hospitals – Creating a Network for better outcomes Consultation proposals 2024-2025:

1>By Email > Send your completed Questionnaire by email to the Department by attaching the Consultation Questionnaire to the email address:    rebuildinghsc.services@health-ni.gov.uk

2>By Online Questionnaire

Click on the Online Questionnaire link below and scroll down to and click ‘have your say

https://consultations2.nidirect.gov.uk/doh-1/hospitals-creating-a-network-for-better-outcomes/

There are two versions of the Suggested Answers (ONLINE QUESTIONNAIRE ) AVAILABLE

V6 (With Longer Detailed Answers)

V8 (With Shorter Answers)

3>By Post > A hard copy of your response Questionnaire can also be sent in Writing to:

Transformation Branch
Regional Health Services Transformation Directorate
Department of Health
Annex 3, Castle Buildings
Stormont Estate
Belfast
BT4 3SQ

By the Closing Date of 28th February 2025.

For Enquiries on the ‘Hospitals -Creating a Network for better outcomes’ consultation the Department of Health contact email is: rebuildinghsc.services@health-ni.gov.uk

Department of Health General Telephone number is : Telephone: 028 9052 0500

In 2019, you did it – over 19, 500 people sent back consultation Reponses disagreeing with Dept of Health plans to cut the existing number of Stroke Units in NI and centralise stroke services to as few as sites as possible.

People power here worked after thousands filled in the Questionnaire with 95% rejecting the options, with concerns about longer travel times in an emergency. Following this consultation – the Health Minister Robin Swann MLA said stronger evidence was needed – so change can happen if we write in large numbers to these consultations.

In 2024/5 there is a new plan as the Department of Health now proposes to go way beyond centralising Stroke services and proposes changes to the whole Regional Hospital Network. This plan puts Hospitals in NI into four categories: Local, General, Area Hospitals and Specialist Regional Centres.

The majority of Specialist Inpatient Services for example Stroke, Emergency Surgery etc are proposed to be centralised to 5 newly chosen Area Hospitals (at Antrim, Altnagelvin, Craigavon, Ulster and Belfast Group Hospitals) and Specialist Regional Centres (at Altnagelvin, Ulster Hospital and Belfast Hospitals) (*Ref1)

In these proposals Daisy Hill Hospital (Newry); South West (Enniskillen) and Causeway (Coleraine) are to be known as ‘General Hospitals’.  (Very different from the new proposed ‘Area Hospitals’)

The Government now wants to consult with you, the public who are paying for the service to see if they agree with these new proposals. 

Acute hospital-Emergency entrance

DAISY HILL HAS BEEN PUT IN THE WRONG CATEGORY OF ‘GENERAL’ HOSPITAL – BUT THIS CAN BE CHANGED IF ENOUGH PEOPLE DISAGEE WITH THE NEW PROPOSALS

As mentioned in previous posts, only 5 places have been selected to be upgraded to be higher level ‘Area Hospitals’ – they are: Craigavon, Antrim, Altnagelvin, Ulster and Belfast Group Hospitals.  “These Area Hospitals will maintain a 24/7 emergency department, a 24/7 emergency surgery and anaesthetic rota and theatre, and be supported by a critical care unit.” (Consultation Doc p35/37pdf)  Annex D also states Area Hospitals will be expected to have 31 specialty services with inpatient beds. (Page 106/8)

What about the General Hospitals?

Information on the limited services expected to be available from ‘General hospitals’ can be read in the Consultation document ‘Hospitals – Creating a Network for better outcomes’ from the Department of Health’s website. (See p23, 34-36, and 113)

In the document’s very important Actions page (p113, See Action 4) –it is rather concerning that the words ‘Short to Medium Term’*(Ref 2) are used when referring to maintaining core services in the ‘General Hospital’ category. And it is the Hospital Trusts who will be in charge of this.

Are core services not going to be maintained for the Long Term in the General Hospitals then? No other Hospital Category is dealt with in this way in the Actions Page.

Daisy Hill Acute Hospital, Newry has been incorrectly put in the ‘General Hospital’ category in this new report which also falsely  describes the Newry area as a small ‘isolated’ geographical location and community (*(Ref 3) See pages 6,23, 34).

The Department of Health report fails to recognise the consistently large population size, recorded illness statistics needs and large land mass area in the Newry & District area. 

Daisy Hill Hospital, Newry must be given the long overdue investment and specialist inpatient services it and the rate-paying and tax paying population here deserves.

We must challenge these unfair proposals. In Health and Wellbeing 2026 Delivering Together (p19) First Minister and former Health Minister Michelle O’Neill MLA stated “Our HSC system belongs to all of us and we all bring valuable insights in to how it can improve. We must work in partnership – patients, services users, families’ staff and politicians – in doing so we co-produce lasting change which benefits us all.”  *(Ref 4)

DAISY HILL HOSPITAL IS ENTITLED TO BE AN AREA HOSPITAL & NEEDS YOUR HELP – PLEASE DISAGREE WITH THE PROPOSALS

Your help is needed to answer the Consultation through the Questionnaire and let the Dept of Health know that they have put Daisy Hill Acute Hospital, Newry into the wrong category –due to the population size, need and land mass here.

We have a right to continue to challenge, at every opportunity, these vital healthcare decisions.  Pls take part in the Consultation and Strongly disagree with the proposals, stating in the Questionnaire that Daisy Hill Acute Hospital, Newry is entitled to be and should be categorised as an ‘Area Hospital’ along with the other Area Hospitals.  

Please ask everyone in your house to take part take part in this public Consultation too and pls ask your friends, family and community and Elected Representatives to do the same.

BACKGROUND INFORMATION/ REFERENCES

REFERENCES

*Ref. 1. Hospitals – Creating a Network for better outcomes.  Department of Health, (October 2024).  Main Consultation document, Hospital Categories (Pages – pdf pg no. p23-25)

*Ref. 2. Action 4 states that “Consideration to be given to how in the short to medium term HSC Trusts can work in collaboration to maintain these core General Hospital services.” Creating a Network for better outcomes.  Department of Health, October 2024.  Main Consultation document, (pdf pg no p113)

*Ref. 3 Description of General Hospitals ,In ‘Creating a Network for better outcomes’. (Department of Health, October 2024,) the word ‘isolated’ is used 3 times  describing the ‘location’ and ‘community’ of the 3 named proposed ‘General hospitals’: Causeway Hospital, Daisy Hill Hospital and South West Hospital(p6,p23, p34).

P6/23 :  “General Hospitals, delivering defined secondary care services including unscheduled care, geared to a specific, more ISOLATED geographical location…”

P34/ “What and Where: General Hospitals” – …… These hospitals have a key role in ensuring our system can respond to the challenges of an aging population, delivering a range of acute and rehabilitation services, with the advantage that they are closer to an otherwise more ISOLATED community.”]

*Ref. 4. Health and Wellbeing 2026 – Delivering Together – Department of Health, (October 2016.) (p19)

*Definition –‘Centralise’  “concentrate under one control” (Collins English Dictionary)

Daisy Hill Acute Hospital, Newry City.
Daisy Hill Hospital, Newry City

BACKGROUND INFORMATION

WHY DAISY HILL HOSPITAL IN NEWRY IS ENTITLED TO BE AN AREA HOSPITAL:

>Reason 1 – Population fact 1: Out of 17 GP Federations in NI, Newry & District GP Federation has the 2nd highest number of patients (161,308) registered after only Derry GP Federation since 2017 (Source: DOH 2023/24).

Newry & District includes 36,018 children and young people aged U18, the 2nd highest of the 17 GP Federations after only Derry (Source: DOH 2023/24).

Reason 2 – Population fact 2: Newry & Mourne Local Government District (One of 26 Former Councils) RANKED IN THE TOP FOUR HIGHEST POPULATION CENTRES In NI after only Belfast, Derry and Lisburn.  (From 1971 to 2014)

Reason 3> Population fact 3: Newry & Mourne LGD has ALWAYS HAD THE HIGHEST POPULATION of the 5 LGDS in the operational area of Southern Trust. (Source NISRA).  The 5 LGDS are Newry & Mourne, Craigavon, Armagh, Dungannon and Banbridge.

Reason 4 – Landmass fact : Newry & Mourne local government district area alone has the 3RD LARGEST LANDMASS in NI (898.3 Sq Km: Source NISRA).

Further reading: https://savedaisyhillhospital.com/2025/01/28/gp-registers-show-vital-need-for-daisy-hill-newry-as-an-area-hospital-with-24-7-level-1-ed/

Further reading: https://savedaisyhillhospital.com/2025/02/23/new-updated-shorter-ready-reference-suggested-answers-online-consultation/

Further Reading: https://savedaisyhillhospital.com/2025/01/26/daisy-hill-newry-is-entitled-to-be-in-the-area-hospital-category-in-the-doh-hospital-network-public-consultation-2024-25/

Information on this and other similar topics is also available at the companion Facebook page https://www.facebook.com/daisyhillforlife/ Please Follow or Like the Page to receive updates. Thank you.

Subscribe to Blog via Email

© Daisy Hill for Life on Facebook and http://www.savedaisyhillhospital.com, 2015 – 2025.

NEW Updated! Shorter Ready Reference Suggested Answers (Online consultation)

UPDATED 23.02.2025.

New Shorter Suggested answers to read or use with official Department of Health ONLINE Consultation Questionnaire for ‘Hospitals – Creating a Network for Better Outcomes’

(Full Consultation Information is available from the Background / Links section at the end of the page.)

Click on the LINK below to go to the Webpage to make an Online Response to the Department of Health Public Consultation: ‘Hospitals Creating a Network for better outcomes’

https://consultations2.nidirect.gov.uk/doh-1/hospitals-creating-a-network-for-better-outcomes/

Note: You don’t have to answer the Extra Comment Questions in the ONLINE Questionnaire, you can just select the STRONGLY DISAGREE buttons etc and click Continue to go on to the next Question – but to help make the case why Daisy Hill Hospital, Newry  should not be downgraded and is entitled to be made into an AREA HOSPITAL, Shorter suggested  answers are available here, which can be copied and pasted onto the Questionnaire as required.

If you only give an answer explanation to one Question, please ANSWER the ONLINE Q10 (which asks what this DOH Hospital Network Consultation has missed) and please state the need that Daisy Hill Hospital, Newry is entitled to be made  into an Area Hospital. (Answer Available below)

READY REFERENCE SUGGESTED ANSWERS (ONLINE Qs 1- 19) for DOH ONLINE Consultation Questionnaire for ‘Hospitals – Creating a Network for Better Outcomes’

Questions are numbered Q.1 – Q.19 on the Online Survey Version of Questionnaire (Different no’s to the Word Document version of the Questionnaire)

Based on actual population data and other factors Daisy Hill Hospital in Newry should have been made into an ‘Area Hospital’ and not a ‘General Hospital.’ For example: Population Fact 1: Of the 17 GP Federations in NI, Newry & District has the 2nd highest number of patients (161,308) registered with GP Federations after only Derry, since 2017. (Source: DOH 2023/24).

This Consultation does not value the importance of  the need for TIMELY access to ‘Accident & Emergency’ treatment where every minute counts (which includes for Stroke, Heart and Emergency Surgery) as well as accident victims  in comparison to accessing ‘non emergency’ treatment like elective care.                

ONLINE Q.11 To what extent to do you agree or disagree that the proposed list of actions in the framework will improve the experience and outcomes for service users in Northern Ireland?

Answer Q11. STRONGLY DISAGREE

ONLINE Q12. To what extent to do you agree or disagree that the framework explains how reconfiguration decisions are taken?

Answer Q12. STRONGLY DISAGREE

ONLINE Q13. To what extent do you agree or disagree that the framework explains how you will be engaged as part of the decision making process?

Answer Q13. STRONGLY DISAGREE

ONLINE Q14. Please explain the reason for your answer and provide any additional comments below –
**You do not have to give an answer here unless you want to add something

ONLINE Q15. Taking into account the answers you have provided; if you have any further comments on any aspect of this framework or the proposed actions please include below.

Answer ONLINE Q15.

If the hospital network is to be changed with ‘Area Hospitals’ at the heart of the system, then based on the health needs of Newry & Mourne Area which has had a consistently high population since 1971 to present  – Daisy Hill Hospital, Newry now located in the 3rd largest council in NI (Newry Mourne and Down) should be enhanced to be a ‘Area Hospital’ and maintain “a 24/7 Emergency Department, a 24/7 Emergency surgery and anaesthetic rota and theatre, and be supported by a critical care unit”.

Daisy Hill Hospital, Newry should also have secured for the LONG TERM future the same broad range of specialist inpatient services as the ‘Area Hospitals’ described in this consultation  including Paediatrics and Obstetrics.          

(Newry Mourne and Down Council has a current population of approx 182,634 (NISRA 2022)

Equality and Rural Needs Assessments

ONLINE Q16. A) Do you agree or disagree with the Draft Equality Impact Assessment (EQIA)?

Answer Q16: FULLY DISAGREE

ONLINE Q17. Please provide comments below:

ANSWER -ONLINE Q. 17:

 I fully disagree. These proposals and mitigating actions’ are not just or fair and will not deliver ‘health care equity’ across NI. According to this Equality document, ‘Travel support’ will be needed for most of the named Equality groups to access this new hospital network, so these proposals don’t keep to Equality rules or Human Rights. Responsibilities for accessing timely ‘Emergency’ treatment (which includes Emergency surgery) services are bypassed onto other external department’s including the Department for Infrastructure (Transport ) Also ‘Good Relations’ between communities / councils across NI will not be fostered under these proposals.

There are serious concerns regarding ‘healthcare equity’ for the population in Newry Mourne and Down (NMD). Under these consultation proposals, the population of Newry Mourne and Down will NOT have timely access to 24/7 INPATIENT Emergency Care TREATMENT. The Department of Health and others have a duty of care to continue to provide a Specialist Acute Hospital in Newry,  with inpatient beds, specialist inpatient Services and 24/7 Consultant Led Emergency surgery and Emergency Medical services based on a Population Needs Assessment.  This will ensure equitable access to specialist Acute Hospital services for the  growing population in Newry Mourne and Down LGD – the 3rd largest LGD population in NI: current population approx 182,634 (NISRA 2022).    


ONLINE Q18 B) Do you agree or disagree with the Draft Rural Needs Impact Assessment?

ANSWER Q18 b) FULLY DISAGREE

ONLINE Q. 19: SUGGESTED ANSWER  

I fully disagree with the Draft Rural Needs Impact Assessment as these proposals will create worse health outcomes for all rural populations.  Approx 36%* population of NI live in a rural area including in Newry Mourne and Down (NISRA 2020*). As the meaning of equity is ‘something that is just and fair’, this policy will not improve ‘healthcare equity’ as it aims to do, as rural residents in NI will NOT be able to “access TIMELY, high-quality care.”    

Under the 2016 Rural Needs Act, the Department of Agriculture, Environment and Rural Affairs (DAERA) and the Dept of Health have a duty of care to make sure the health and economic needs of the rural community are fully met and are entitled to be included, not deprived of the economic prosperity that being included in an Area hospital Network brings.

The Rural Impact document (page 4) has completely ignored the impact the proposals would have on Jobs, Employment, Education, Training, Poverty, and Deprivation in Rural Areas and Rural Development.

The location of the 5 proposed ‘Area Hospitals’ all with 24/7 Level 1 ED (Altnagelvin, Antrim, Craigavon, Belfast Hospitals Campus and Ulster Hospital) are concentrated within half hour of Belfast, and in Derry. Only the population in these urban areas will have TIMELY access to 24/7 Level 1 Consultant Led INPATIENT EMERGENCY CARE TREATMENT, the rural areas will NOT have TIMELY access.


Section 75 Equality Questions (optional) ONLINE Q 20 – 28 (These are Optional but you have to either select ‘Prefer not to say’ option or choose an answer to continue.

END OF QUESTIONS
****
QUICK SUMMARY

Online Q1-4 Personal Information
Online Q5-8 STRONGLY DISAGREE
Online Q9. YES
Online Q10 Add Comments if you want – see Suggested Answers above
Online Q11-13 STRONGLY DISAGREE
Online Q14 & 15. Add Comments if you want – see Suggested Answers above.
Online Q16 STRONGLY DISAGREE (Equality Impact Assessment)
Online Q17 Add Comments if you want – see Suggested Answers above.
Online Q18 STRONGLY DISAGREE (Rural Needs Impact Assessment)
Online Q19 Add Comments if you want – see Suggested Answers above.

ONLINE Q 20 – 28 Section 75 Equality Questions (optional)
20. Religious belief
21. Political opinion
22. Race
23.Gender
24.Marital status
25. Age bracket
26. Disability
27. Dependants
28. Sexual Orientation

(These are Optional but you have to either Select your answers for these or select ‘Prefer not to say’ option to continue.

END OF QUICK SUMMARY

The Consultation Closes on Friday 28th February at 5pm.

BACKGROUND / LINKS


LINK ********DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH ONLINE CONSULTATION LINK – CLICK BELOW

https://consultations2.nidirect.gov.uk/doh-1/hospitals-creating-a-network-for-better-outcomes/

The link below is the main Consultation link from the Department of Health website for the ‘Creating a Network for better outcomes’ Consultation . It gives all documents including main report, Rural Impact and Equality Impact Assessments, Consultation Questionnaire Word document all available to download and read.

https://www.health-ni.gov.uk/consultations/hospitals-creating-network-better-outcomes-public-consultation

Daisy Hill Hospital in Newry is entitled to be an Area Hospital - 5 factual reasons which show this Department of Health Consultation has failed to recognise the need for an Area Hospital in Newry based on the population size, health needs and strategic location of Newry, County Down./County Armagh.

Extra info / Downloads

For your convenience, these Answers in this article can be read by downloading a handy Ready Ref Sheet – Word Document ‘V8 Shorter Ready Ref Answers Sheet for ONLINE Q’s DOH’ file below.

OR

For people who prefer to Email a seperate copy of the Questionnaire via Email – an updated version of the Full Questionnaire is available to download below. (You will need to add your own Answers to the Personal Details Questions at the beginning – please see further reading for more info)

ALTERNATIVE MICROSOFT WORD VERSION of Full Questionnaire (Prefilled – Short Answers) for Emailing

For more Information about this Consultation and How to Take Part – see links below.

Thank you. Please Share if you think this will help someone else take part in this very important Consultation for the future of Daisy Hill Hospital and its dedicated staff. 

Further Reading

https://savedaisyhillhospital.com/2025/02/23/how-to-take-part-in-the-doh-hospital-network-consultation-with-suggested-responses-updated-23-02-2025/


See also: https://savedaisyhillhospital.com/2025/01/28/gp-registers-show-vital-need-for-daisy-hill-newry-as-an-area-hospital-with-24-7-level-1-ed/

See also: https://savedaisyhillhospital.com/2025/01/26/daisy-hill-newry-is-entitled-to-be-in-the-area-hospital-category-in-the-doh-hospital-network-public-consultation-2024-25/

Information on this and other similar topics is also available at the companion Facebook page https://www.facebook.com/daisyhillforlife/ Please Follow or Like the Page to receive updates. Thank you.

Daisy Hill Hospital for Life

© Daisy Hill for Life on Facebook and http://www.savedaisyhillhospital.com, 2015 – 2025.

Ready Reference Suggested Answers (Online consultation)

Daisy Hill

If you disagree with Daisy Hill being downgraded from one of the 9 Major acute Hospitals in NI to just a General Hospital with limited services – you just need to select STRONGLY DISAGREE when answering the Consultation Questions in the DOH public consultation ’Hospitals –Creating a Network…’ You can simply just strongly disagree with the proposals and submit that as your consultation response.

You do not have to even answer the Extra Comment Questions but if you DO want to add Extra Comments to your answers – you are welcome to use these Suggested Answers shown below when filling in the Online Questionnaire for ‘Hospitals– creating a network for better outcomes’

Some of these SUGGESTED TYPED ANSWERS below are long answers so people can select some sentences or paragraphs to use, if they wish. The full answers may be too long for the box provided on the online Questionnaire, so just copy and paste partsas you wish into the relevant boxes on the Online Questionnaire.

READY REFERENCE SUGGESTED ANSWERS (ONLINE Qs 1- 19) for Department of Health ONLINE Consultation Questionnaire for ‘Hospitals – Creating a Network for Better Outcomes’ (LINK at end )

Questions are numbered Q.1 to Q.19 on the Online Survey Version of Questionnaire (Different no’s to the on the Word Document version of the Questionnaire)

ONLINE Q1. What is your name?
ONLINE Q2. What is your email address?
ONLINE Q3. Are you responding as an individual or on behalf of an organisation, please highlight the most relevant option:

(Choose your own answer from the list of – Member of the general public / Service user/ Family carer / Social care worker/ Social worker etc or Voluntary & Community sector option and so on.)

ONLINE Q4. If you selected ‘Other’ Please specify the name of the Organisation, Voluntary & Community sector, Private Company or Public Body:

ONLINE Q5. To what extent do you agree or disagree with the explanation within the framework of why we need to change how our hospitals function?

Answer Q5. STRONGLY DISAGREE

ONLINE Q6. To what extent do you agree or disagree with the description of the type of Northern Ireland hospitals as presented in the framework that build towards a Hospital Network? These are: Local Hospitals, Area Hospitals, General Hospitals and Regional Centres. Note: The detailed description each type of hospital is on page 4 of the consultation document.

Answer Q6 STRONGLY DISAGREE

ONLINE Q7 To what extent do you agree or disagree with the ‘core services’ identified for the different types of hospitals, especially for the area hospitals and three general hospitals?

Answer Q7. STRONGLY DISAGREE

ONLINE Q8 To what extent do you agree or disagree that the proposed list of actions identified in the framework are the correct ones to create a more sustainable hospital network in Northern Ireland?

Answer Q8. STRONGLY DISAGREE

ONLINE Q9 Taking into account the proposals set out in the framework and the answers you have provided above; do you think there is anything we have missed?

ANSWER Q9 YES

ONLINE Q.10 If your answer is Yes, please provide further detail and explanation below:

ANSWER Q.10 Area Hospital categories have not been matched to accurate population size data.
Based on actual population data and other factors Daisy Hill Hospital in Newry should have been named an ‘Area Hospital’ and not a ‘General Hospital.’

Population Fact 1: Of the 17 GP Federations in NI, Newry & District has the 2nd highest number of patients (161,308) registered with GP Federations after only Derry, since 2017. (Source: DOH 2023/24).

Population Fact 2: From 1971 to 2014 Newry & Mourne local government district (one of 26 former councils) ranked in the top 4 highest population centres in NI after only Belfast, Derry and Lisburn (Source NISRA).

Population Fact 3: Newry Mourne & Down local government district is the 3rd largest council population in NI since the 11 Council admin (started in 2015 to present) with a population of 182,634 including 45,193 children aged u18 (NISRA 2022).

ONLINE Q.11 To what extent to do you agree or disagree that the proposed list of actions in the framework will improve the experience and outcomes for service users in Northern Ireland?

Answer Q11. STRONGLY DISAGREE

ONLINE Q12. To what extent to do you agree or disagree that the framework explains how reconfiguration decisions are taken?

Answer Q12. STRONGLY DISAGREE

ONLINE Q13. To what extent do you agree or disagree that the framework explains how you will be engaged as part of the decision making process?

Answer Q13. STRONGLY DISAGREE

ONLINE Q14. Please explain the reason for your answer and provide any additional comments below –
**You do not have to give an answer here unless you want to add something

ONLINE Q15. Taking into account the answers you have provided; if you have any further comments on any aspect of this framework or the proposed actions please include below.

ANSWER Q15. If the hospital network is to be changed with ‘Area Hospitals’ at the heart of the system, then based on the health needs of Newry & Mourne Area which has had a consistently high population since 1971 to present – Daisy Hill Hospital, Newry now located in the 3rd largest council in NI (Newry Mourne and Down) should be enhanced to be a ‘Area Hospital’ and maintain “a 24/7 Emergency Department, a 24/7 Emergency surgery and anaesthetic rota and theatre, and be supported by a critical care unit”.

Daisy Hill Hospital, Newry should also have secured for the LONG TERM future the same broad range of specialist inpatient services as the ‘Area Hospitals’ described in this consultation including Paediatrics and Obstetrics.

Equality and Rural Needs Assessments

ONLINE Q16. A) Do you agree or disagree with the Draft Equality Impact Assessment (EQIA)?

Answer Q16: FULLY DISAGREE

ONLINE Q17. Please provide comments below:

Answer Q17: I fully disagree with the Equality Impact Assessment because this policy will definitely not improve ‘healthcare equity’ across NI.
In fact the Equality Assessment has admitted that ‘travel support’ will be needed for the majority (six out of 9) equality groups to access this new hospital network and that travel support will be needed for human rights as well– showing that under these proposals, this new proposed network will not achieve its aims so I cannot support it.

There are serious concerns regarding ‘healthcare equity’ for the population in Newry Mourne and Down (NMD). Under these consultation proposals, the population of Newry Mourne and Down will NOT be able to “access timely, high-quality care.”

The location of the 5 proposed ‘Area Hospitals’ (Altnagelvin, Antrim, Craigavon, Belfast Hospitals Campus and Ulster Hospital, (whose services include 24/7 Level 1 ED) are concentrated in Urban Areas only within half hour of Belfast, and in Derry. Only the population in these urban areas will have TIMELY access to 24/7 INPATIENT Emergency Care TREATMENT.

Follow Delivering Together 2026 instruction that: ‘Demographics must be considered when designing public services.’ The Department of Health, Trust and Commissioners have a duty of care to continue to provide a Specialist Area Hospital in Newry, with inpatient beds, specialist inpatient Services and 24/7 Consultant Led Emergency surgery and Emergency Medical services based on a Population Needs Assessment. This will ensure equitable access to specialist Acute Hospital services for the growing population in Newry Mourne and Down LGD – the 3rd largest LGD population in NI: current population approx 182,634 (NISRA 2022).

As well as Equality and Human Rights concerns, this is also a big issue under ‘Good Relations’ between communities / councils across NI which will not be fostered under these proposals.

ONLINE Q18 B) Do you agree or disagree with the Draft Rural Needs Impact Assessment?

ANSWER Q18 b) FULLY DISAGREE

ONLINE Q19. Please provide comments below:

ANSWER Q19: I fully disagree with the Draft Rural Needs Impact Assessment.
Approx 36% population of NI live in a rural area including in Newry Mourne and Down (NISRA 2020). This policy will not improve ‘healthcare equity’ as rural residents in NI will NOT be able to “access timely, high-quality care” if the three Acute Hospitals in Newry, Coleraine, and Enniskillen, (who even now have no “Local” hospitals nearby to “support” them) are removed from the existing network of 9 major Acute Hospitals.

The location of the 5 proposed ‘Area Hospitals’ all with 24/7 Level 1 ED (Altnagelvin, Antrim, Craigavon, Belfast Hospitals Campus and Ulster Hospital) are concentrated within half hour of Belfast, and in Derry. Only the population in these urban areas will have TIMELY access to 24/7 Level 1 Consultant Led INPATIENT EMERGENCY CARE TREATMENT, the rural areas will NOT have TIMELY access.

This will create worse health outcomes for all rural populations including Newry Mourne and Down local government district area which has the 3rd largest population in NI (182,634:NISRA 2022).
This policy document does not seem to understand the difference between accessing timely ‘Emergency’ treatment (which includes Emergency surgery) and ‘non emergency’ treatment like elective care.
The proposals in this document have failed in its mission to improve healthcare equity for all citizens to access timely, high-quality care. Rural Needs are not met.

The in-built bias of Urban over Rural in these proposals must be re-examined. The Department of Agriculture, Environment and Rural Affairs (DAERA) as well as the Dept of Health have a duty of care to ensure the health and economic needs of the rural community are fully met.
Daisy Hill Acute Hospital, (when it was under the former Newry & Mourne Health and Social Services Trust) was one of the biggest employers in the Newry & Mourne Area.
In 2007 Daisy Hill Acute Hospital, Newry, was recognised as a Queens University Training Hospital and is entitled to be retained as a Training Hospital in its own right in any DoH Plans for future location of HSC Area hospital jobs, employment and Education and Training places.

Under the 2016 Rural Needs Act, the 161,308 people in Newry & District GP Federation (which includes S.Down and S.Armagh) are entitled to be included, not deprived of the economic prosperity that being included in an Area hospital network brings. NI needs more Area hospitals not less and Daisy Hill, Newry should have been designated as an Area Hospital.

In these proposals it seems responsibilities for access to services are bypassed onto other external departments including the Department for Infrastructure (Transport duties).

Section 75 Equality Questions (optional) ONLINE Q 20 – 28 (These are Optional but you have to either select ‘Prefer not to say’ option or choose an answer to continue.

END OF QUESTIONS
****


QUICK SUMMARY

Online Q1-4 Personal Information
Online Q5-8 STRONGLY DISAGREE
Online Q9. YES
Online Q10 Add Comments if you want – see Suggested Answers above
Online Q11-13 STRONGLY DISAGREE
Online Q14 & 15. Add Comments if you want – see Suggested Answers above.
Online Q16 STRONGLY DISAGREE (Equality Impact Assessment)
Online Q17 Add Comments if you want – see Suggested Answers above.
Online Q18 STRONGLY DISAGREE (Rural Needs Impact Assessment)
Online Q19 Add Comments if you want – see Suggested Answers above.

ONLINE Q 20 – 28 Section 75 Equality Questions (optional) (These are Optional but you have to either select ‘Prefer not to say’ option or choose an answer to continue.

END OF QUICK SUMMARY

The Consultation Closes on Friday 28th February at 5pm.

BACKGROUND AND LINKS


LINK ********DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH ONLINE CONSULTATION LINK – CLICK BELOW

https://consultations2.nidirect.gov.uk/doh-1/hospitals-creating-a-network-for-better-outcomes/

The link below is the main Consultation link from the Department of Health website for the ‘Creating a Network for better outcomes’ Consultation . It gives all documents including main report, Rural Impact and Equality Impact Assessments, Consultation Questionnaire Word document all available to download and read.

https://www.health-ni.gov.uk/consultations/hospitals-creating-network-better-outcomes-public-consultation

Daisy Hill Hospital in Newry is entitled to be an Area Hospital - 5 factual reasons which show this Department of Health Consultation has failed to recognise the need for an Area Hospital in Newry based on the population size, health needs and strategic location of Newry, County Down./County Armagh.

Thank you. Please Share if you think this will help someone else take part in this very important Consultation for the future of Daisy Hill Hospital and its dedicated staff. 

Further Reading


https://savedaisyhillhospital.com/2025/01/05/dept-of-health-hospital-network-consultation-2024-2025-a-suggested-response/


See also: https://savedaisyhillhospital.com/2025/01/28/gp-registers-show-vital-need-for-daisy-hill-newry-as-an-area-hospital-with-24-7-level-1-ed/

See also: https://savedaisyhillhospital.com/2025/01/26/daisy-hill-newry-is-entitled-to-be-in-the-area-hospital-category-in-the-doh-hospital-network-public-consultation-2024-25/

Information on this and other similar topics is also available at the companion Facebook page https://www.facebook.com/daisyhillforlife/ Please Follow or Like the Page to receive updates. Thank you.

Daisy Hill Hospital for Life

© Daisy Hill for Life on Facebook and http://www.savedaisyhillhospital.com, 2015 – 2025.

GP Registers show vital need for Daisy Hill, Newry as an Area Hospital with 24-7 Level 1 ED

GP Registers show vital need for Daisy Hill, Newry as an Area Hospital with 24-7 Level 1 ED

DAISY HILL HOSPITAL NEWRY IS ENTITLED TO BE CATEGORISED AS AN AREA HOSPITAL – FACTS FROM GP REGISTERS

The case for RETAINING not WITHDRAWING specialist Acute Services and 24 /7 Consultant Led Emergency Services in Daisy Hill Acute Hospital, Newry City is very strong and evidence based. 

This is why these Emergency and Specialist Acute services were always in Daisy Hill in the first place as recognised in 2003 under Developing Better Services Hospital Network Consultation when Daisy Hill was designated as one of 9 Acute Hospitals, of equal status, with 24/7 Consultant Led Emergency Surgical, Emergency Medical, and 24/7 Consultant- led Maternity Services.

But now it seems the case must be made again in the ongoing Department of Health Consultation “Hospitals – Creating a Network for Better Outcomes’,Why?

Because the Dept of Health, by downgrading Daisy Hill Acute Hospital has failed to recognise the health needs of Newry & District’s* large population size (which covers Newry, South Down and South Armagh areas), failed to take into account the strategic location of Newry and is proposing to make Daisy Hill into a General Hospital with limited services.

This CAN and must be challenged though the Public Consultation process by answering the questionnaire and promoting the need, without delay, for an Area Hospital in Newry. 

This is the latest in a series of posts which aims to explain each of the reasons in turn which can be used for people taking part in the written consultation, who can disagree with conviction on the Dept. Of Health proposal for Daisy Hill Hospital in Newry to be demoted into a General Hospital with limited services, and for the public to call instead for an Area Hospital in Newry.

An Area Hospital is needed to give the vast population of adults and children here (especially those who live in rural areas) timely equity of access to inpatient Emergency and Acute hospital services. Details on the Consultation and different categories of Hospital proposed are available from the DOH Website and from Daisy Hill for life website (See link at end)

>THERE ARE 161,308 PEOPLE ON DOCTORS REGISTERS IN NEWRY AND DISTRICT GP FEDERATION (DOH May 2024)

There are currently 17 GP Federations covering all areas of NI. One of their aims is to help deliver the Transformation Agenda in Health and Social Care. There are 29 Registered GP Practices in Newry & District GP Federation, covering Newry, South Down and South Armagh areas.

Newry & District GP Federation includes GP practices in Kilkeel, Crossmaglen, Annalong, Rathfriland, Killeavy, Newtownhamilton, Mullaghbawn, Bessbrook, Warrenpoint as well as Newry.

Out of the 17 GP federations in NI – Newry & District GP Federation has the second highest (161,308) number of registered patients (after only Derry GP Federation) since 2017 (Source: DOH 2023/24).    

Daisy Hill Hospital Emergency Department is vital for stroke and life threatening emergencies

POPULATION HEALTH NEEDS IN NEWRY & DISTRICT – SERIOUS HEALTH CONDITIONS ARE WIDESPREAD

As well as the large population size, a second important reason, as shown in the picture/graphic is that many people living in Newry & District have a high incidence of serious health needs or health conditions including Heart Failure and Stroke, Coronary Heart Disease, Cancer, Atrial Fibrillation, Hypertension and Kidney Disease. Many of these patients need and are entitled to have equitable timely access to 24/7 Consultant-Led Emergency Surgery and Emergency Medical Care, High Dependency Care and Specialist Acute Inpatient Hospital care in Daisy Hill Hospital.

Data showing 15 health conditions on GP Registers in Newry & District show the vital need for Daisy Hill, Newry to be categorised as an Area Hospital with a 24/7 Level 1 ED as part of the proposed Regional network of hospitals. (Note: all 17 GP Federations have records for the same 15 health conditions*.)

An Area Hospital with 24/7 Level 1 ED at Daisy Hill in Newry is vital to ensure better outcomes for survival and recovery of patients as well as giving timely equity of access also for other health conditions and in Emergency situations that may arise.

CONCLUSION

Of 17 GP Federations in NI – Newry & District GP Federation (covering Newry, South Down and South Armagh area) has the SECOND HIGHEST number of patients registered with GP Practices in NI since 2017 (161,308 patients ) with many patients having serious health needs.

If the Department of Health had used a Population Health Needs Assessment (at Trust/Local Commissioning Group level), with data on illnesses/conditions  taken from the 17 GP Federations including Newry & District GP Federation, the DoH would have acknowledged that Daisy Hill Acute Hospital, Newry was entitled to be categorised as an Area Hospital.

PLEASE TAKE PART IN THE CONSULTATION

Please reply to DOH Hospital Network Consultation 2025 proposals and make the case for vital need for DAISY HILL AREA HOSPITAL.

Full information on the Consultation, and some Suggested answers to the Questionnaire are available from the LINK below:

https://savedaisyhillhospital.com/2025/01/05/dept-of-health-hospital-network-consultation-2024-2025-a-suggested-response/

Please Share this post if you can, to spread the word. Thank you.

BACKGROUND/ LARGE POPULATION SIZE IN NEWRY & DISTRICT

Newry & District GP patient register includes 36,018 children and young people aged U18, the 2nd highest of the 17 GP Federations after only Derry (Source: DOH 2023/24).

*(Source DOH: published May 2024)

ENDS 

Daisy Hill Hospital for Life

Information on this and other similar topics is also available at the companion Facebook page https://www.facebook.com/daisyhillforlife/ Please Follow or Like the Page to receive updates. Thank you.

Subscribe to Blog via Email

© Daisy Hill for Life on Facebook and http://www.savedaisyhillhospital.com, 2015 – 2025.

Daisy Hill, Newry is entitled to be in the ‘Area Hospital’ Category in the DOH Hospital Network Public Consultation 2024/25

YOU DID IT BEFORE – YOU CAN DO IT AGAIN –PEOPLE POWER NEEDED FOR DAISY HILL HOSPITAL , NEWRY.

Daisy Hill Hospital Newry is entitled to be an Area Hospital in the Department of Health Hospital Network Consultation 2024-2025.

In 2019, you did it – over 19, 500 people sent back Consultation Reponses disagreeing with Department of Health plans to cut the existing number of Stroke Units in NI and centralise stroke services to as few as sites as possible.

People power here worked after thousands filled in the Questionnaire with 95% rejecting the options, with concerns about longer travel times in an emergency. Following this consultation – the Health Minister Robin Swann MLA said stronger evidence was needed – so change can happen if we write in large numbers to these consultations.

In 2024/5 there is a new plan as the Department of Health now proposes to go way beyond centralising Stroke services and proposes changes to the whole Regional Hospital Network. This plan puts Hospitals in NI into four categories: Local, General, Area Hospitals and Specialist Regional Centres.

In the Department of Health Consultation document ‘Hospitals – Creating a Network for better outcomes’, the majority of Specialist Inpatient Services for example Stroke, Emergency Surgery etc are proposed to be centralised to 5 newly chosen Area Hospitals (at Antrim, Altnagelvin, Craigavon, Ulster and Belfast Group Hospitals) and Specialist Regional Centres (at Altnagelvin, Ulster Hospital and Belfast Hospitals) (*Ref1)

In these proposals Daisy Hill Hospital (Newry); South West (Enniskillen) and Causeway (Coleraine) are to be known as ‘General Hospitals’.  (Very different from the new proposed ‘Area Hospitals’)

The Government now wants to consult with the public who are paying for the service, to see if they agree with these new proposals. 

DAISY HILL HAS BEEN PUT IN THE WRONG CATEGORY OF ‘GENERAL’ HOSPITAL – BUT THIS CAN BE CHANGED IF ENOUGH PEOPLE DISAGREE WITH THE NEW CONSULTATION PROPOSALS

As mentioned before, only 5 places have been selected to be upgraded to be higher level ‘Area Hospitals’ – they are: Craigavon, Antrim, Altnagelvin, Ulster and Belfast Group Hospitals.  “These Area Hospitals will maintain a 24/7 emergency department, a 24/7 emergency surgery and anaesthetic rota and theatre, and be supported by a critical care unit.” (Consultation Doc p35/37pdf)  Annex D also states Area Hospitals will be expected to have 31 specialty services with inpatient beds. (Page 106/8)

What about the General Hospitals?

Information on the limited services expected to be available from ‘General hospitals’ can be read in the Consultation document ‘Hospitals – Creating a Network for better outcomes’ from the Department of Health’s website. (See pages 23, 34-36, and 113)

In the document’s very important Actions page (p113, See Action 4) –it is rather concerning that the words ‘Short to Medium Term’*(Ref 2) are used when referring to maintaining core services in the ‘General Hospital’ category. And it is the Hospital Trusts who will be in charge of this.

Are core services not going to be maintained for the Long Term in the General Hospitals then? No other Hospital Category is dealt with in this way in the Actions Page.

Daisy Hill Acute Hospital, Newry has been incorrectly put in the ‘General Hospital’ category in this new report which also falsely  describes the Newry area as a small ‘isolated’ geographical location and community (*(Ref 3) See pages 6,23, 34).

The Department of Health report fails to recognise the consistently large population size, recorded illness statistics needs and large land mass area in the Newry & District area. 

Daisy Hill Hospital, Newry must be given the long overdue investment and specialist inpatient services it and the rate-paying and tax paying population here deserves.

Your help is needed to answer the Consultation through the Questionnaire and let the Dept of Health know that they have put Daisy Hill Acute Hospital, Newry into the wrong category –due to the population size, need and land mass here.

We must challenge these unfair proposals. In Health and Wellbeing 2026 Delivering Together (p19) First Minister and former Health Minister Michelle O’Neill MLA stated “Our HSC system belongs to all of us and we all bring valuable insights in to how it can improve. We must work in partnership – patients, services users, families’ staff and politicians – in doing so we co-produce lasting change which benefits us all.”  *(Ref 4)

DAISY HILL HOSPITAL IS ENTITLED TO BE AN AREA HOSPITAL & NEEDS YOUR HELP – PLEASE DISAGREE WITH THE CONSULTATION PROPOSALS

We have a right to continue to challenge, at every opportunity, these vital healthcare decisions.  Please take part in the Consultation and Strongly disagree with the proposals, stating in the Questionnaire that Daisy Hill Acute Hospital, Newry is entitled to be and should be categorised as an ‘Area Hospital’ along with the other Area Hospitals.  

Please ask everyone in your house to take part take part in this public Consultation too and please ask your friends, family and community and Elected Representatives- councillors, MLAs and MPs to do the same.

IMPORTANT – See this Link below to Daisy Hill Hospital for life website for all links to Department of Health Consultation, Questionnaire and Suggested Answers (to read and/or use if you agree) with instructions and Source References.

Daisy Hill Hospital, Newry Saves Lives - People Power 2023

5 EVIDENCE BASED REASONS WHY DAISY HILL HOSPITAL IN NEWRY IS ENTITLED TO BE AN AREA HOSPITAL

>Reason 1 – Population fact 1: Out of 17 GP Federations in NI, Newry & District GP Federation has the Second highest number of patients (161,308) registered after only Derry GP Federation since 2017. (Source: DOH 2023/24).

Newry & District includes 36,018 children and young people aged U18, the 2nd highest of the 17 GP Federations after only Derry (Source: DOH 2023/24).

>Reason 2 – Population fact 2: Newry & Mourne Local Government District (One of 26 Former Councils) RANKED IN THE TOP FOUR HIGHEST POPULATION CENTRES In NI after only Belfast, Derry and Lisburn.  (From 1971 to 2014)

>Reason 3> Population fact 3: Newry & Mourne LGD has ALWAYS HAD THE HIGHEST POPULATION of the 5 LGDS in the operational area of Southern Trust. (Source NISRA).  The 5 LGDS are Newry & Mourne, Craigavon, Armagh, Dungannon and Banbridge.

>Reason 4 – Landmass fact : Newry & Mourne local government district area alone has the 3RD LARGEST LANDMASS in NI (898.3 Sq Km: Source NISRA).

>Reason 5: NEWRY CITY’S STRATEGIC LOCATION. Newry City could not be in a more pivotal position. NEWRY CITY is a Gateway and Main Hub in the Spatial Framework for NI to 2035. Newry is midway on the route from Belfast to Dublin on the TENS Key Transport Corridor.

It is also on the North Sea- Mediterranean Corridor: Cork> Dublin > NEWRY > BELFAST > Larne. The Eastern Seaboard Corridor is the Strategic Route linking Larne to the Border at Newry via Belfast facilitating onward travel to Dublin and the Port of Rosslare. Newry is a Gateway City to the Ring of Gullion and the Mournes (Areas of Outstanding Natural Beauty) and Gateway to the new Ring of Gullion Mourne and Sperrins UNESCO Heritage site.

Newry is so busy they are prepared to spend over £94 million on the Southern Traffic Relief Road but not on a Major hospital for potential road accidents, residents and visitors. Warrenpoint, close to Newry is the 2nd largest Port in NI.

Daisy Hill Acute Hospital, Newry is entitled to be an Area Hospital due to the consistently high population size, need and land mass area in Newry & District.  in the Department of Health's new public Consultation ‘Hospitals – Creating a Network for better outcomes’ Daisy Hill Acute Hospital has been wrongly put into the wrong Hospital category of general Hospital. Public help is needed to answer through the Questionnaire and let the Department know this and make Daisy Hill an Area Hospital, like the other Area Hospitals.

BACKGROUND INFORMATION/ REFERENCES

*Ref. 1. Hospitals – Creating a Network for better outcomes.  Department of Health, (October 2024).  Main Consultation document, Hospital Categories (Pages – pdf pg no. p23-25)

*Ref. 2. Action 4 states that “Consideration to be given to how in the short to medium term HSC Trusts can work in collaboration to maintain these core General Hospital services.” Creating a Network for better outcomes.  Department of Health, October 2024.  Main Consultation document, (pdf pg no p113)

*Ref. 3 Description of General Hospitals in ‘Creating a Network for better outcomes’. (Department of Health, October 2024,) the word ‘isolated’ is used 3 times  describing the ‘location’ and ‘community’ of the 3 named proposed ‘General hospitals’: Causeway Hospital, Daisy Hill Hospital and South West Hospital (Pages 6, 23, 34).

P6/23 :  “General Hospitals, delivering defined secondary care services including unscheduled care, geared to a specific, more ISOLATED geographical location…”

P34/ “What and Where: General Hospitals” – …… These hospitals have a key role in ensuring our system can respond to the challenges of an aging population, delivering a range of acute and rehabilitation services, with the advantage that they are closer to an otherwise more ISOLATED community.”]

*Ref. 4. Health and Wellbeing 2026 – Delivering Together – Department of Health, (October 2016.) (p19)

*Definition –‘Centralise’  “concentrate under one control” (Collins English Dictionary)

Northern Ireland Ambulances Saves Lives - Daisy Hill Hospital Saves Lives

For Suggested Answers to the Questionnaire and more info on this current consultation please see : https://savedaisyhillhospital.com/2025/01/05/dept-of-health-hospital-network-consultation-2024-2025-a-suggested-response/

Want to know how else you can help? – please see: https://savedaisyhillhospital.com/how-you-can-help/

Further reading on population:

https://savedaisyhillhospital.com/2020/02/04/newry-mourne-local-government-district-lgd-ranks-in-the-top-4-lgds-in-all-northern-ireland-consistently-since-1971-so-where-is-the-matched-funding-for-daisy-hill-acute-hospital-newry/

Information on this and other similar topics is also available at the companion Facebook page https://www.facebook.com/daisyhillforlife/ Please Follow or Like the Page to receive updates. Thank you.

Subscribe to Blog via Email

© Daisy Hill for Life on Facebook and http://www.savedaisyhillhospital.com, 2015 – 2025.

DOH Hospital Network Consultation 2024-2025 – Suggested Response (Updated! )

QUICK LINKS – SHORT EXTRACT

*SUGGESTED ANSWERS HELP 1 – FULL QUESTIONNAIRE (Prefilled)

A NEW word version of the Questionnaire (W shorter -with Shorter Answers – with some pre-filled selected options to read or use for your own answers is available to download by clicking on the Download button below.

A word version of the Questionnaire (version V3-Longer Answers) with some pre-filled selected options to read or use for your own answers is available to download by clicking on the Download button below.

*SUGGESTED ANSWERS HELP 2 (ONLINE QUESTIONNAIRE)

You can use this V8 Shorter Suggested Answers – Ready Reference Sheet (word document) BELOW to help you if want to copy and paste onto or if you need some ideas while you are filling out the online questionnaire. (Link to the online Questionnaire in main article)

You can use this V6 Extra Online Qs Suggested Answers Sheet (word document) BELOW to help you if you need some ideas while you are filling out the online questionnaire. (Link to the online Questionnaire in main article)

If you agree with the typed answer suggestions you can even copy and paste the answers in part or full. (Just download it to your device and open the file for reference)

OR

You can use this V6 Extra Online Qs Suggested Answers Sheet (lONGER ANSWERS) (word document) BELOW to help you if you need some ideas while you are filling out the online questionnaire. (Link to the online Questionnaire in main article)

If you agree with the typed answer suggestions you can even copy and paste the answers in part or full. (Just download it to your device and open the file for reference)

Please note these files are in Word document format, if you are unable to open these files on your mobile or laptop successfully, it may be because your device doesn’t have Word installed.

Updated Feb 2025

If you are unable to download the Word files and want to fill in the Online Questionnaire page- you can go to these pages below instead :

FOR NEW SHORTER ANSWERS – see this page:

https://savedaisyhillhospital.com/2025/02/23/new-updated-shorter-ready-reference-suggested-answers-online-consultation/

OR FOR MORE DETAILED LONGER ANSWERS – SEE THIS PAGE BELOW:

https://savedaisyhillhospital.com/2025/02/19/ready-reference-suggested-answers-online-consultation/

DOH Hospital Network Consultation 2024-2025 – A Suggested Response

Daisy Hill Acute Hospital, Newry is entitled to be an Area Hospital due to the consistently high population size, need and land mass area in Newry & District. In the Department of Health’s new public Consultation ‘Hospitals – Creating a Network for better outcomes’, Daisy Hill Acute Hospital has been put into the wrong Hospital category of ‘General Hospital’.

Public help is needed to answer through the Questionnaire to put the case forward to the Department of Health through the Public consultation process for Daisy Hill to be made an Area Hospital, like the other Area Hospitals, as it is entitled to be.

You can help by responding to this Department of Health Consultation ‘Hospitals – Creating a Network for better outcomes.’ (October 2024) (More information on the topic is explored in ‘Why This Consultation Matters section below.

An updated word version of the Questionnaire with some pre-filled selected options to read or use for your own answers, (now with extra info on the Rural Needs and Equality Questions) is available to download by clicking on the Download button below :

NEW SHORTER ANSWERS!!

Notes for the Prefilled Questionnaire

>If you use this pre-filled version you will first need to save the file to your phone/computer/device etc), Select the Save As Option, and select where you want to save it in Downloads/Documents etc.

>Then give it a new filename by adding your initials at the front/end or some other change to the standard name.

Example 1. New file name: AB questionnaire doh-hospitals-better-outcomes.

Example 2. New file name: questionnaire doh-hospitals-better-outcomesRR1

>Edit the new version by starting with Q1 to add your name and Q2 to add your Email address by typing into the Space in the Answer Boxes on the Questionnaire. This is really important so the department will count it as a real response coming from you. (There is space to add extra comments on some of the other answer boxes if you wish. )

>When you are finished Save your file again and then your version of the Questionnaire is ready. This new filename is the version you can send as an email attachment, (or for printing, if you want to post it.)

Ways to respond are detailed below.

Daisy Hill Hospital Newry is entitled to be an Area Hospital in the Department of Health Hospital Network Consultation 2024-2025.

DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH CONSULTATION LINKS

https://www.health-ni.gov.uk/consultations/hospitals-creating-network-better-outcomes-public-consultation

The link above is the main Consultation link from the Department of Health website for the ‘Creating a Network for better outcomes’ Consultation . It gives all documents including main report, Rural Impact and Equality Impact Assessments,  Consultation Questionnaire Word document all available to download and read.

WAYS TO RESPOND TO THE CONSULTATION

There are 3 WAYS TO RESPOND to Department of Health Hospitals – Creating a Network for better outcomes Consultation proposals 2024-2025:

1>By Email > Send your completed Questionnaire by email to the Department by attaching the Consultation Questionnaire to the email address:    rebuildinghsc.services@health-ni.gov.uk

2>By Online Questionnaire

Click on the Online Questionnaire link below and scroll down to and click ‘have your say’

https://consultations2.nidirect.gov.uk/doh-1/hospitals-creating-a-network-for-better-outcomes/

3>By Post > A hard copy of your response Questionnaire can also be sent in Writing to:

Transformation Branch
Regional Health Services Transformation Directorate
Department of Health
Annex 3, Castle Buildings
Stormont Estate
Belfast
BT4 3SQ

By the Closing Date of 28th February 2025.

For Enquiries on the ‘Hospitals -Creating a Network for better outcomes’ consultation the Department of Health contact email is: rebuildinghsc.services@health-ni.gov.uk

Department of Health General Telephone number is : Telephone: 028 9052 0500

In 2019, you did it – over 19, 500 people sent back consultation Reponses disagreeing with Dept of Health plans to cut the existing number of Stroke Units in NI and centralise stroke services to as few as sites as possible.

People power here worked after thousands filled in the Questionnaire with 95% rejecting the options, with concerns about longer travel times in an emergency. Following this consultation – the Health Minister Robin Swann MLA said stronger evidence was needed – so change can happen if we write in large numbers to these consultations.

In 2024/5 there is a new plan as the Department of Health now proposes to go way beyond centralising Stroke services and proposes changes to the whole Regional Hospital Network. This plan puts Hospitals in NI into four categories: Local, General, Area Hospitals and Specialist Regional Centres.

The majority of Specialist Inpatient Services for example Stroke, Emergency Surgery etc are proposed to be centralised to 5 newly chosen Area Hospitals (at Antrim, Altnagelvin, Craigavon, Ulster and Belfast Group Hospitals) and Specialist Regional Centres (at Altnagelvin, Ulster Hospital and Belfast Hospitals) (*Ref1)

In these proposals Daisy Hill Hospital (Newry); South West (Enniskillen) and Causeway (Coleraine) are to be known as ‘General Hospitals’.  (Very different from the new proposed ‘Area Hospitals’)

The Government now wants to consult with you, the public who are paying for the service to see if they agree with these new proposals. 

Acute hospital-Emergency entrance

DAISY HILL HAS BEEN PUT IN THE WRONG CATEGORY OF ‘GENERAL’ HOSPITAL – BUT THIS CAN BE CHANGED IF ENOUGH PEOPLE DISAGEE WITH THE NEW PROPOSALS

As mentioned in previous posts, only 5 places have been selected to be upgraded to be higher level ‘Area Hospitals’ – they are: Craigavon, Antrim, Altnagelvin, Ulster and Belfast Group Hospitals.  “These Area Hospitals will maintain a 24/7 emergency department, a 24/7 emergency surgery and anaesthetic rota and theatre, and be supported by a critical care unit.” (Consultation Doc p35/37pdf)  Annex D also states Area Hospitals will be expected to have 31 specialty services with inpatient beds. (Page 106/8)

What about the General Hospitals?

Information on the limited services expected to be available from ‘General hospitals’ can be read in the Consultation document ‘Hospitals – Creating a Network for better outcomes’ from the Department of Health’s website. (See p23, 34-36, and 113)

In the document’s very important Actions page (p113, See Action 4) –it is rather concerning that the words ‘Short to Medium Term’*(Ref 2) are used when referring to maintaining core services in the ‘General Hospital’ category. And it is the Hospital Trusts who will be in charge of this.

Are core services not going to be maintained for the Long Term in the General Hospitals then? No other Hospital Category is dealt with in this way in the Actions Page.

Daisy Hill Acute Hospital, Newry has been incorrectly put in the ‘General Hospital’ category in this new report which also falsely  describes the Newry area as a small ‘isolated’ geographical location and community (*(Ref 3) See pages 6,23, 34).

The Department of Health report fails to recognise the consistently large population size, recorded illness statistics needs and large land mass area in the Newry & District area. 

Daisy Hill Hospital, Newry must be given the long overdue investment and specialist inpatient services it and the rate-paying and tax paying population here deserves.

We must challenge these unfair proposals. In Health and Wellbeing 2026 Delivering Together (p19) First Minister and former Health Minister Michelle O’Neill MLA stated “Our HSC system belongs to all of us and we all bring valuable insights in to how it can improve. We must work in partnership – patients, services users, families’ staff and politicians – in doing so we co-produce lasting change which benefits us all.”  *(Ref 4)

DAISY HILL HOSPITAL IS ENTITLED TO BE AN AREA HOSPITAL & NEEDS YOUR HELP – PLEASE DISAGREE WITH THE PROPOSALS

Your help is needed to answer the Consultation through the Questionnaire and let the Dept of Health know that they have put Daisy Hill Acute Hospital, Newry into the wrong category –due to the population size, need and land mass here.

We have a right to continue to challenge, at every opportunity, these vital healthcare decisions.  Pls take part in the Consultation and Strongly disagree with the proposals, stating in the Questionnaire that Daisy Hill Acute Hospital, Newry is entitled to be and should be categorised as an ‘Area Hospital’ along with the other Area Hospitals.  

Please ask everyone in your house to take part take part in this public Consultation too and pls ask your friends, family and community and Elected Representatives to do the same.

BACKGROUND INFORMATION/ REFERENCES

REFERENCES

*Ref. 1. Hospitals – Creating a Network for better outcomes.  Department of Health, (October 2024).  Main Consultation document, Hospital Categories (Pages – pdf pg no. p23-25)

*Ref. 2. Action 4 states that “Consideration to be given to how in the short to medium term HSC Trusts can work in collaboration to maintain these core General Hospital services.” Creating a Network for better outcomes.  Department of Health, October 2024.  Main Consultation document, (pdf pg no p113)

*Ref. 3 Description of General Hospitals ,In ‘Creating a Network for better outcomes’. (Department of Health, October 2024,) the word ‘isolated’ is used 3 times  describing the ‘location’ and ‘community’ of the 3 named proposed ‘General hospitals’: Causeway Hospital, Daisy Hill Hospital and South West Hospital(p6,p23, p34).

P6/23 :  “General Hospitals, delivering defined secondary care services including unscheduled care, geared to a specific, more ISOLATED geographical location…”

P34/ “What and Where: General Hospitals” – …… These hospitals have a key role in ensuring our system can respond to the challenges of an aging population, delivering a range of acute and rehabilitation services, with the advantage that they are closer to an otherwise more ISOLATED community.”]

*Ref. 4. Health and Wellbeing 2026 – Delivering Together – Department of Health, (October 2016.) (p19)

*Definition –‘Centralise’  “concentrate under one control” (Collins English Dictionary)

Daisy Hill Acute Hospital, Newry City.
Daisy Hill Hospital, Newry City

BACKGROUND INFORMATION

WHY DAISY HILL HOSPITAL IN NEWRY IS ENTITLED TO BE AN AREA HOSPITAL:

>Reason 1 – Population fact 1: Out of 17 GP Federations in NI, Newry & District GP Federation has the 2nd highest number of patients (161,308) registered after only Derry GP Federation since 2017 (Source: DOH 2023/24).

Newry & District includes 36,018 children and young people aged U18, the 2nd highest of the 17 GP Federations after only Derry (Source: DOH 2023/24).

Reason 2 – Population fact 2: Newry & Mourne Local Government District (One of 26 Former Councils) RANKED IN THE TOP FOUR HIGHEST POPULATION CENTRES In NI after only Belfast, Derry and Lisburn.  (From 1971 to 2014)

Reason 3> Population fact 3: Newry & Mourne LGD has ALWAYS HAD THE HIGHEST POPULATION of the 5 LGDS in the operational area of Southern Trust. (Source NISRA).  The 5 LGDS are Newry & Mourne, Craigavon, Armagh, Dungannon and Banbridge.

Reason 4 – Landmass fact : Newry & Mourne local government district area alone has the 3RD LARGEST LANDMASS in NI (898.3 Sq Km: Source NISRA).

Further reading: https://savedaisyhillhospital.com/2025/01/28/gp-registers-show-vital-need-for-daisy-hill-newry-as-an-area-hospital-with-24-7-level-1-ed/

Information on this and other similar topics is also available at the companion Facebook page https://www.facebook.com/daisyhillforlife/ Please Follow or Like the Page to receive updates. Thank you.

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© Daisy Hill for Life on Facebook and http://www.savedaisyhillhospital.com, 2015 – 2025.

Nuffield Trust Report recommended Daisy Hill Hospital, Newry should be bolstered with some Hyper-Specialist Services (e.g. Stroke)

Nuffield Trust Report 2023 Recommended Daisy Hill Hospital, Newry should be bolstered with some Hyper-Specialist Services (e.g. Stroke)

The independent think tank Nuffield Trust were commissioned by the Southern Health and Social Care Trust to report on ‘how care might be improved at the Daisy Hill (DH) site.’ and review services. This Nuffield Trust Report* dated 31 March 2023 sent to Dr Maria O’Kane, Chief Executive of the Southern Trust provides key findings and suggestions for building a sustainable model of care at Daisy Hill Hospital in Newry. One of the main recommendations in the Nuffield Trust Report was that there should be:

‘Bolstering of the DH site through provision of some hyper-specialist services (e.g., stroke), as well as regular outpatient clinics in each specialty on site.’ (Page 4)

As well as this recommendation emphasising the need for Specialist services like Hyper Acute Stroke in Daisy Hill Hospital, the Nuffield Trust Report emphasises the importance of Critical Care Services in Daisy Hill (e.g. the High Dependency Unit) and for Outpatient Clinics in each specialty on the DHH site. 

The Nuffield Trust also discusses staffing considerations across the Southern Trust’s TWO acute Hospitals, at Daisy Hill, Newry and at Craigavon. (*A link to the full report is available in References/Links below.)

CONCLUSION

BOLSTERING OF HYPER-SPECIALIST SERVICES IN DAISY HILL, NEWRY IS NEEDED TO SAVE LIVES

In their Report of March 2023 following their review, the Nuffield Trust came to the conclusion that there was need for more Hyperacute services in Daisy Hill Acute Hospital, Newry stating Daisy Hill Hospital should be bolstered with Hyper-Specialist services e.g. stroke. (See p4)

ILLNESS PREVALANCE STATS SHOW THE NEED IN NEWRY & DISTRICT

According to GP Registers in 2023 Newry & District GP Federation had the HIGHEST number in NI of patients on their register for Heart Failure (2,060 patients);also THIRD HIGHEST of the 17 GP Federation Registers for Hypertension (21,465 patients); Cancer (4,582 patients); Coronary Heart Disease (5,259 patients); Asthma (9,613 patients); Chronic Kidney disease (6,434 patients) and Atrial Fibrillation (3,258 patients).

Newry & District Federation also had fourth highest number of patients in NI with Stroke (2,680 patients) after GP Federations in Derry (3,991 patients) East Antrim (3,282), South West (2,749). (Source: DOH 2023)

The Nuffield Trust Report also advised the Southern Trust that Public commitment to Daisy Hill Hospital from the Southern Trust Executive Team was urgently needed, writing: 

1.Public commitment to the DH Site – There is an urgent need for the Executive Team to commit to the DH site and to a long-term plan for the two sites to be developed.’
(Page 4)

As recommended by the impartial Nuffield Trust Report, the Southern Trust Executive Team needs to make a firm commitment to Daisy Hill Acute Hospital and develop a long term plan for its future development. 

REFERENCES AND LINKS

*The full Nuffield Trust Report 31st March 2023 can be read in the preview below or downloaded by clicking on the Download button underneath :

(This report is also available from the Southern Trust website.)

Who are the Nuffield Trust?

“The Nuffield Trust is an independent health think tank. We aim to improve the quality of health care in the UK by providing evidence-based research and policy analysis and informing and generating debate.” https://www.nuffieldtrust.org.uk/about/what-we-do

Newry & District’s very large population size is proven by official data, as in 2023 Newry & District has the 2nd highest number of patients on GP registers in NI (with 160,615) after only Derry, including the 2nd highest number of children in NI under 18, with (36,228 ): (Source DOH 2023).

Newry Mourne and Down is the 3rd largest Council in NI with a population of 182,634.This includes 45,193 children under 18 and 31,473 over the age of 65 (NISRA 2022).

Daisy Hill Acute Hospital Emergency Department serves the entire area of Newry and Mourne and South Armagh the largest popultation in the Southern Trust

Text, graphics and logo ©Daisy Hill for Life on Facebook and http://www.savedaisyhillhospital.com,
2015 – 2024.

Excerpts and links may be used, provided that full and clear credit is given to  http://www.savedaisyhillhospital.com  (Daisy Hill Hospital for Life) and Daisy Hill for Life on Facebook with appropriate and specific direction to the original content. Thank-you. We welcome sharing.

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Daisy Hill Hospital for Life

Daisy Hill Acute Hospital is the heart of the community – The heart that keeps us alive.

Daisy Hill Acute Hospital -the heart of the community - The heart that keeps us alive. Restore Emergency Surgery to Daisy Hill Hospital, Newry.

Newry Mourne and Down District Council recently announced a motion against the Permanent Secretary’s decision to permanently remove Emergency Surgery from Daisy Hill Hospital and are calling for the new Health Minister to reinstate Emergency Surgery at Daisy Hill Acute Hospital immediately. (Link at end)

It is good to see this action from Newry Mourne and Down Councillors on this vitally important issue, whose job it is to speak and act for the people in their areas. The estimated population of Newry, Mourne and Down Council for 2023/24 is 185,808 adults and children (NISRA). Newry Mourne and Down has the third biggest Council population in NI, with the third largest land mass area.

The removal of Emergency Surgery from Daisy Hill Hospital, Newry is a very serious withdrawal of a core timely life-saving Regional Emergency service from an Acute Hospital.

Centralisation of this kind also has a serious impact on all other Health Trusts especially the Ambulance Trust.

The Southern Trust does not have the authority to remove Regional Services.

This decision to permanently remove Emergency Surgery from an Acute Hospital can only be taken after a Regional Public Consultation and after approval by a Health Minister.

Just like the changes to Stroke Services and all other Regional Services which affect the whole population, before there are any permanent changes to Emergency Surgery Services at Daisy Hill Acute Hospital, Newry, the following will be required:

1. A proper Population Needs Assessment using official data from NISRA
and
2. An open and accessible Regional Public Consultation on Emergency Surgery provision.

As Health Minister, Mr Robin Swann MLA will be aware of the importance of all factors in Regional health service decision making and will wish to ensure that there is no geographic disparity (inequality) in the core acute hospital services provided across the region.

He will also be aware of the need to match other core values for the Programme of Government including Good Relations, Rural Needs and Climate Change Regulations.

Health Minister Robin Swann MLA will be aware of all these factors and the decision now rests with him.

Daisy Hill hospital is the heart of the community – and needs to remain as an Acute Hospital, the people have paid for it to be there when they need it in an emergency.

Background Links
https://www.newrymournedown.org/council-meeting-minutes

Information on this and other similar topics is also available at the companion Facebook page https://www.facebook.com/daisyhillforlife/ Please Follow or Like the Page to receive updates. Thank you.

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© Daisy Hill for Life on Facebook and http://www.savedaisyhillhospital.com, 2015 – 2024

We welcome sharing of this info and the use of excerpts and links, please give full and clear credit to http://www.savedaisyhillhospital.com and Daisy Hill for Life with appropriate and specific direction to the original content. Thank-you.

DAISY HILL HOSPITAL CAMPAIGN HIGHLIGHTS OF 2023 ( Updated! )

SOS Daisy Hill Hospital Committee Public Rally in Newry on 25 June 2023

As 2023 draws to a close, we thought it fitting to remember a very special stand out event from the Daisy Hill Hospital Campaign in 2023 – by returning to the SOS Daisy Hill Hospital Committee Public Rally in Newry on 25 June 2023 to feature some of the speeches spoken from the platform.

Over 10,000 men, women and children came out to support SOS Daisy Hill Hospital Committee by gathering in Marcus Square for speeches and then a people’s march up to Daisy Hill Hospital, applause for the staff and a walk right around the hospital complex to form a “ring of steel” of people.

A number of excellent speakers spoke to the assembled crowd at the Rally in Marcus Square, and audio of three of the speakers is available here – Pls click on the links to listen:

Francis Gallagher Chairperson of SOS Daisy Hill Hospital Committee

Tanya Killen President of NIPSA (Northern Ireland Public Service Association)

Deborah Yapicioz UNISON

Eddy Curtis SOS Daisy Hill Hospital Committee

As we remember that day and listen to some of the available inspirational speeches, is a reminder of the enthusiasm, strength of feeling and determination that exists in the community and beyond to continue to challenge unfair decisions like the removal of core emergency services and beds and the failure of the Southern Trust and others to properly invest, plan or recruit for Daisy Hill Acute Area Hospital, Newry.

The words and actions of this Public Rally in June encourage us to look forward with positivity and with determination for the future of Daisy Hill Acute Hospital in 2024.

Summed up by Mr Eddy Curtis from SOS Daisy Hill Hospital Committee from the Rally platform that day, here are some extracts from his speech:

“We have to continue battling and fighting and putting our best foot forward – to say the people of Newry & Mourne and South Armagh will not accept anything less than an international quality of health that you deserve.

 We are asking all families and their children to lead the parade, because at the end of the day – they are the future of our region and they are the people who are going to need health services.

We are going to walk right round the hospital – to put a ring of steel on it and let them see– it’s ours – you cannot touch it – you have to invest in it.”

Eddy Curtis (SOS Daisy Hill Hospital Committee)
SOS Daisy Hill Hospital Committee Public Rally in Newry on 25 June 2023

Population info

GP registers in NI : Newry & District has 160,615 patients (2nd highest in NI (after only Derry), including the 2nd highest number of children in NI under 18, with (36,228 ) (Source DOH 2023)

For more on this topic:

OUR HEALTH SERVICE, OUR ACUTE HOSPITALS – PAID FOR WITH OUR PUBLIC MONEY – see: https://wordpress.com/post/savedaisyhillhospital.com/4163

Real Need for Hospital Services and Specialist Acute Inpatient Beds in Newry Region – see: https://wordpress.com/post/savedaisyhillhospital.com/4012

Daisy Hill Acute Hospital's Emergency Department with Emergency Surgery is a  Northern Ireland Regional Service and saves Lives

Text, graphics and logo ©Daisy Hill for Life on Facebook and http://www.savedaisyhillhospital.com, 2015 – 2024.

Excerpts and links may be used, provided that full and clear credit is given to http://www.savedaisyhillhospital.com (Daisy Hill Hospital for Life) and Daisy Hill for Life on Facebook with appropriate and specific direction to the original content. Thank-you! We welcome sharing.

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Daisy Hill Hospital for Life logo

DAISY HILL HOSPITAL CAMPAIGN HIGHLIGHTS OF 2023

SOS Daisy Hill Hospital Committee Public Rally in Newry on 25 June 2023

As 2023 draws to a close, we thought it fitting to remember a very special stand out event from the Daisy Hill Hospital Campaign in 2023 – by returning to the SOS Daisy Hill Hospital Committee Public Rally in Newry on 25 June 2023 to feature some of the speeches spoken from the platform.

Over 10,000 men, women and children came out to support SOS Daisy Hill Hospital Committee by gathering in Marcus Square for speeches and then a people’s march up to Daisy Hill Hospital, applause for the staff and a walk right around the hospital complex to form a “ring of steel” of people.

A number of excellent speakers spoke to the assembled crowd at the Rally in Marcus Square, and audio of three of the speakers is available here – Pls click on the links to listen:

Francis Gallagher Chairperson of SOS Daisy Hill Hospital Committee

Tanya Killen President of NIPSA (Northern Ireland Public Service Association)

Deborah Yapicioz UNISON

Eddy Curtis SOS Daisy Hill Hospital Committee

As we remember that day and listen to some of the available inspirational speeches, is a reminder of the enthusiasm, strength of feeling and determination that exists in the community and beyond to continue to challenge unfair decisions like the removal of core emergency services and beds and the failure of the Southern Trust and others to properly invest, plan or recruit for Daisy Hill Acute Area Hospital, Newry.

The words and actions of this Public Rally in June encourage us to look forward with positivity and with determination for the future of Daisy Hill Acute Hospital in 2024.

Summed up by Mr Eddy Curtis from SOS Daisy Hill Hospital Committee from the Rally platform that day, here are some extracts from his speech:

“We have to continue battling and fighting and putting our best foot forward – to say the people of Newry & Mourne and South Armagh will not accept anything less than an international quality of health that you deserve.

 We are asking all families and their children to lead the parade, because at the end of the day – they are the future of our region and they are the people who are going to need health services.

We are going to walk right round the hospital – to put a ring of steel on it and let them see– it’s ours – you cannot touch it – you have to invest in it.”

Eddy Curtis (SOS Daisy Hill Hospital Committee)
SOS Daisy Hill Hospital Committee Public Rally in Newry on 25 June 2023

Population info

GP registers in NI : Newry & District has 160,615 patients (2nd highest in NI (after only Derry), including the 2nd highest number of children in NI under 18, with (36,228 ) (Source DOH 2023)

For more on this topic:

OUR HEALTH SERVICE, OUR ACUTE HOSPITALS – PAID FOR WITH OUR PUBLIC MONEY – see: https://wordpress.com/post/savedaisyhillhospital.com/4163

Real Need for Hospital Services and Specialist Acute Inpatient Beds in Newry Region – see: https://wordpress.com/post/savedaisyhillhospital.com/4012

Daisy Hill Acute Hospital's Emergency Department with Emergency Surgery is a  Northern Ireland Regional Service and saves Lives

Text, graphics and logo ©Daisy Hill for Life on Facebook and http://www.savedaisyhillhospital.com, 2015 – 2023.

Excerpts and links may be used, provided that full and clear credit is given to http://www.savedaisyhillhospital.com (Daisy Hill Hospital for Life) and Daisy Hill for Life on Facebook with appropriate and specific direction to the original content. Thank-you! We welcome sharing.

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