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.

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.

OUR HEALTH SERVICE, OUR ACUTE HOSPITALS – PAID FOR WITH OUR PUBLIC MONEY

SoS Daisy Hill Hospital Campaign Rally - another show of community strength in Newry city on 25.06.2023. Estimated 10,000 attended the Rally in Marcus Square, Newry and then walked up to Daisy Hill Acute Hospital.

The most recent full Department of Health Report, ‘Health and Wellbeing 2026: Delivering Together’ brought out by former Health Minister Michelle O’Neill, MLA – stated:

“the Health service belongs to all of us… Everyone who uses and delivers our health and social care services must be treated with respect, listened to and supported to work as real partners within the HSC system.” *

Health and Wellbeing 2026: Delivering Together’ p19

When it comes to any decisions made about Daisy Hill Acute Hospital, Newry and any of the Acute Hospitals here in this NI region, these Principles in Delivering Together and the Rules and Procedures around the spending of public money and the statutory accountability of all who deliver and attempt to withdraw Regional Health public services must be followed.

Emergency Surgery and Acute Stroke Services are REGIONAL Services. They cannot be centralised again from a major Acute Hospital like Daisy Hill without a valid Population Needs Assessment and a full Regional Public Consultation by the Department of Health.  A local or individual Health Trust Consultation is NOT enough to make a decision to withdraw vital Regional Services like Accident and Emergency Surgical or Medical services from one area of NI which is going to have a detrimental adverse effect on the lives of everyone across the NI region.

FAILURE TO FOLLOW DUE PROCESS MEANS THE DECISIONS ARE INVALID.

The local catchment population are asking for and are entitled to fair treatment and continuing access to acute hospital premises when it comes to the availability of Emergency Surgery and Emergency Stroke services in their acute hospital Daisy Hill, Newry City.

CENTRALISED TO NINE MAJOR ACUTE HOSPITALS IN 2003

In 2003, following the Hayes Review and Regional Consultation, Acute Hospital Provision including 24/7 Consultant Led Accident and Emergency Services and Maternity services were Centralised  to nine major acute hospitals. It was recognised by the Department of Health at that time, following the Regional Consultation that the three newly designated acute hospitals in Newry, Enniskillen, and Coleraine, were also needed as well as the so called “Golden Six” to provide timely access to Acute Hospital services as well as ensuring timely access to 24/7 Consultant- Led Emergency Surgery and Emergency Medical Services and Maternity Services to everyone no matter where they choose to live in NI.

All three acute hospitals are situated within predominately rural areas with no nearby acute hospital which can provide timely access to Accident and Emergency and Maternity services.

>FURTHER ACTIONS AND REQUIRED SOLUTIONS

For those wishing to take further action for Daisy Hill Hospital, Newry as a designated Acute Hospital, people can build on the action of the SOS Daisy Hill Hospital Committee who recently drafted a letter to send to the Southern Trust Chief Executive which expressed opposition to the decisions to remove Emergency Surgery and Acute Stroke services from Daisy Hill Hospital, Newry to Craigavon Hospital.

SOME SUGGESTIONS FOR REQUIRED SOLUTIONS:

The Southern Trust must:

>1. Immediately return vital life saving Regional Emergency Surgery and Regional Acute Stroke Services to Daisy Hill.

>2. Invest properly in Daisy Hill Acute Hospital, Newry to ensure the large population in Newry & District is provided for and to fulfil their statutory and legal obligations towards Equality, Human Rights, Rural Needs, Rights of the Child, Good relations and Climate Change regulations.

>3. Return permanently specialist acute inpatient beds to Daisy Hill Hospital

>4. Buy permanent major diagnostic equipment for Daisy Hill Hospital and

>5. Recruit properly for staff for Daisy Hill Hospital and stop prioritising Craigavon and (Lurgan (non acute)) Hospitals.

People can keep asking  MLAs, Newry Mourne and Down Council Councillors and officials, local representatives on the Southern Local Commissioning Group, the Southern Trust, DoH NI, Patient Client Council, Public Health Agency,  Equality Commission, Older People’s Commission, Children and Young Peoples Commission for all these five solutions detailed above for Daisy Hill: (1) Return vital services, (2)Investment, (3) inpatient beds, (4) permanent diagnostic equipment and (5) Proper Recruitment for a level playing field for Daisy Hill Acute Hospital Newry because it is true – the health service does belongs to all of us and we must be treated with respect, listened to and supported to work as real partners within the HSC system*

Refs: *(Health and Wellbeing 2026: Delivering Together, Quote p19, Health Minister Michelle O’Neill, MLA

ENDS

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

To read more about Acute Hospitals and population need in NI:

Are people in Northern Ireland being treated fairly in the number and location of specialist acute hospitals? Read more below:

SaveDaisyHillhospital.com and Daisy Hill for Life on Facebook have been created in partnership for the positive promotion of Daisy Hill Acute Hospital, Newry city and to promote the need for expansion of specialist acute services, staff, number of beds, and imaging equipment at Daisy Hill Acute Hospital, Newry city for now and the future.

Consultation on the HSC NI Draft Equality Disability Action Plans 2023-28: closes tomorrow Mon 25th September 2023 – pls take part & give your views

HSC NI Equality Disability Action Plans 2023 Equality Needed in Southern Trust

“The six Health and Social Care Trusts in Northern Ireland have worked in partnership to develop new draft Equality and Disability Action Plans for 2023-28. These draft equality and disability action plans outline the proposed actions to be taken forward by the Health and Social Care Trusts over the next 5 years to address Section 75 inequalities, and to promote positive attitudes towards people with a disability and to encourage participation in public life.  We are now seeking views on our draft Equality and Disability Action Plans and welcome your feedback regarding the potential impact of our proposed actions or how they could be improved.

We are keen to hear from anyone – service users, carers, staff and trade unions and we value input from those with lived experience.

All comments should be returned to the Northern Health and Social Care Trust Equality Unit.”

Information above From the Northern Trust’s website at : https://www.northerntrust.hscni.net/about-the-trust/involving-you/consultations/disabilityandequality/

>QUESTIONNAIRE AVAILABLE BELOW to help you respond to this Consultation.

You can provide your feedback on the draft plans by completing the consultation proforma.  The Northern Trust have also provided a word version of the consultation proforma available.

Consultation Deadline tomorrow Monday 25th September 2023

  • Once it has downloaded -open the Word version of the consultation file and you can start to edit it.
  • You will need to fill in your name and your email address on page 1 and answer the Equality and Disability Plan Qs and if you want to answer the Equality Monitoring Data Questions 10- 20 you can fill them in too.
  • Then Save your filled in consultation questionaire version to your device with a New file name of your choice.

Instructions for those not used to replying to consultations through email

  1. Save file to your device (then Save as a new filename) eg ‘word consultation proforma RSmith or Add your intitals’
  2. Login to your Email, then Select Write New Email/Pen icon/compose
  3. Attach the renamed file to your email using the (paperclip icon/Insert/Attach option)
  4. Type the recipients email address into the To field: equality.unit@northerntrust.hscni.net
  5. Subject field : Response to HSC NI Equality Disability Action Plans 2023 -28 Consultation
  6. Write a short message e.g. Please find attached my consultation response and Hit Send
  7. Send your responses to equality.unit@northerntrust.hscni.net by tomorrow Monday 25th September 2023:

WHY IS THIS CONSULTATION IMPORTANT?

Consultations are one of the best ways to get straight to the decision makers, and stand up for the services we are entitled to in this area.

We all have a say in how our Public Money is spent and have to speak up at every opportunity for Equal Treament and against removal of Regional Emergency Services and specialist Acute inpatient services in Daisy Hill and campaign for the Major new Specialist Acute Hospital building in Newry City for our large population, which was promised at Government level in 2005.

https://consultations2.nidirect.gov.uk/hsc/hscni-equality-and-disability-action-plans/

Consultation References and Links

https://www.northerntrust.hscni.net/about-the-trust/involving-you/consultations/disabilityandequality/

How to give your Feedback (From the Northern Trust )

You can provide your feedback on the draft plans by completing the consultation proforma.  We also have a word version of the consultation proforma available.

Alternatively, we welcome your views in any format.  Please contact the Equality Unit at 028 2766 1377 or equality.unit@northerntrust.hscni.net

You can write to the Equality Unit at Route Complex, 8e Coleraine Road, Ballymoney, Co. Antrim, BT53 6BP.

Online Consultation

https://consultations2.nidirect.gov.uk/hsc/hscni-equality-and-disability-action-plans/

Other Useful links

POPULATION INFO LINK

*For important info on Misrepresented LGD population sizes at :  
https://savedaisyhillhospital.com/2023/07/01/playing-with-numbers-playing-with-peoples-lives/

Registrar General NI Link (which confirms although the 11 council model is in place since 2014, Health Trusts remain under the 26 council model). See below

https://www.nisra.gov.uk/sites/nisra.gov.uk/files/publications/Maps-of-NI-Health-Trusts-and-Local-Government-Districts.pdf     (see p 1& p2)
Link to Registrar General Northern Ireland Annual Report 2015 (Publication date: 31 August 2016)
Appendix 6 Northern Ireland’s Health & Social Care Trusts and Local Government Districts
Appendix 7 Northern Ireland’s 11 Local Government Districts 2015

The Equality Commission for NI : https://www.equalityni.org/

The Northern Ireland Human Rights Commission : https://nihrc.org/

The Commissioner for Older People for Northern Ireland: https://www.copni.org/

NI Commissioner for Children and Young People: www.niccy.org/

YOUR RESPONSES WILL MAKE A DIFFERENCE

Replying to this Consultation and Liking and Sharing these posts can help support all Daisy Hill Hospital campaigns. Thank you.    

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 – 2023

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.

SaveDaisyHillhospital.com and Daisy Hill for Life on Facebook have been created in partnership for the positive promotion of Daisy Hill Acute Hospital, Newry city and to promote the need for expansion of specialist acute services, staff, number of beds, and imaging equipment at Daisy Hill Acute Hospital, Newry city for now and the future.

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People Power in Newry- Daisy Hill Hospital, Newry Saves Lives
People Power in Newry- Daisy Hill Hospital, Newry Saves Lives – 2023

Real Need for Acute Hospital Services and Specialist Acute Inpatient Beds in Newry

There are 160,615 adults and children on GP Registers in Newry & District who depend on timely access to Daisy Hill Acute Hospital, Newry City to Consultant Led Emergency Surgery and Emergency Medical Services to save their lives. There is no other nearby alternative Acute hospital with 24/7 Consultant Led ED Department. How many inpatient beds have the Southern Trust left in Daisy Hil acute Hospital to provide for them? Equality needed in the Southern Health and Social Care Trust
Acute Hospital services and specialist acute inpatient beds needed in Newry 2023. Equality needed in the Southern Health and Social Care Trust.

There are 160,615 adults and children on GP Registers in Newry & District who depend on timely access to Daisy Hill Acute Hospital, Newry City to Consultant Led Emergency Surgery and Emergency Medical Services to save their lives.  There is no nearby alternative Acute hospital with 24/7 Consultant Led ED Department.

On 1st April 2007 the Southern Trust (Under the 2006 Establishment Order) took over responsibility and accountability to the public (from existing providers Newry & Mourne Health & Social Services Trust) to continue to PROVIDE (NOT TAKE AWAY) hospital accommodation (beds) and Services in Daisy Hill Acute Hospital. 

HOW MANY INPATIENT BEDS HAVE THE SOUTHERN TRUST LEFT IN DAISY HILL ACUTE HOSPITAL, NEWRY TO PROVIDE FOR NEWRY & MOURNE POPULATION IN SEPTEMBER 2023?

There were 249.7 beds in Daisy Hill Hospital in 2010*(Ref1) but by September 2023 the Southern Trust has cut the number of inpatient beds dramatically and is now fast tracking centralisation to Craigavon despite the size and need of the larger population in Newry & District.

Newry & District’s very large population size is proven by the latest 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 ). (Ref2*: Source DOH).

The Southern Trust rather than provide hospital accommodation (beds) in Daisy Hill Hospital, Newry – instead recently CUT the number of inpatient beds in Daisy Hill, Newry and then soon afterwards has the insensitivity to put out an appeal to the public for help because high numbers of ill patients need hospital beds due to serious overcrowding in Daisy Hill Hospital and Craigavon Emergency Departments.  (30th August 2023 Extreme Hospital pressures: See end for ‘Public appeal’ link*(Ref 3).

The Southern Health and Social Care Trust, with an income of nearly £945 million public money in 2021/22 has the function in Law to provide hospital accommodation (beds) and services for people in ALL the FIVE local government districts in the Southern Trust operational area (in order of population size, starting with the highest: Newry & Mourne, Craigavon, Armagh, Dungannon and Banbridge).

Yes this is correct – Newry & Mourne LGD has ALWAYS been the highest locality population of the 5 LGDs in the Southern Trust operational area (NISRA) (* Ref4) , however the Southern Trust simply will not allocate the appropriate investment on hospital buildings, services, equipment or staff in Newry & Mourne’s Acute Area Hospital – Daisy Hill.

CONCLUSION

There are unacceptable clear health inequalities in the Southern Trust right now, which must be challenged. 

The Southern Trust is presently providing a 2-tier health system across its two acute hospitals.

For the population of Newry & Mourne the focus is on Acute Care at Home.

>How the Southern Trust are doing this:

The Southern Trust are enhancing ‘ACUTE’ CARE AT HOME services (with patients over 65 years to be cared for in their own homes rather than admitted to hospital), AMBULATORY (SAME DAY) HEALTHCARE and are aiming to provide ALTERNATIVES TO HOSPITAL CLOSE TO HOME as  ABSOLUTE PRIORITIES for the Southern Trust for the POPULATION OF NEWRY & DISTRICT. 

The Southern Trust have drastically reduced specialist acute inpatient beds in Daisy Hill Acute Hospital (DHH), Newry City and their ‘Ambitious’ plan for Daisy Hill aims to prevent and reduce inpatient medical admissions. The Southern Trust wants to transfer acute services from Daisy Hill Hospital to a community treatment centre.

>Meanwhile at the other end of the scale is the SECOND ACUTE HOSPITAL in the Southern Trust – CRAIGAVON.   While Daisy Hill lost beds in 2023 – the Department of Health Budget 2023-24 proposed EXTRA BEDS & PERMANENT DIAGNOSTIC EQUIPMENT FOR CRAIGAVON HOSPITAL AND ENHANCEMENT AFTER ENHANCEMENT.  The Southern Trust steam on ahead with their unwavering plan for a £400million (2014 estimate) MAJOR NEW HOSPITAL FOR THE SMALLER POPULATION OF CRAIGAVON.

Equality means treating people fairly and making sure they have the same chances at life.” According to the HSC Equality Action Plan 2023-28 – but how is this 2-tier health system in the Southern Trust equality?

Hospitals are paid for with public money and the Southern Trust is meant to provide services – not take them away without public consultation. Local authorities must follow the law and be accountable to the people.

REQUIRED SOLUTION:  

The Southern Health and Social Care Trust must:

  1. Invest properly in Daisy Hill Acute Hospital, Newry to ensure the large population in Newry & District is provided for and to fulfil their statutory and legal obligations towards Equality, Human Rights, Rural Needs, Rights of the Child, Good relations and Climate Change regulations.
  2. Return specialist acute inpatient beds to Daisy Hill Hospital
  3. Buy permanent major diagnostic equipment for Daisy Hill Hospital and
  4. Recruit properly for staff for Daisy Hill Hospital and stop prioritising Craigavon and (Lurgan (non acute))  Hospitals.

BACKGROUND REFERENCES & ADDITIONAL DATA

Ref 3 (30th August 2023 Extreme Hospital pressures: Southern Trust Public appeal link: https://www.facebook.com/photo/?fbid=596100106018491&set=a.239622701666235

Ref 4 – Newry & Mourne LGD has ALWAYS been the highest locality population of the 5 LGDs in the Southern Trust operational area. (* Ref4 : Source NISRA). For more information and data on this – pls see: 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/

EXTRA DATA: HOSPITAL INPATIENT BEDS FACTS

(A) INPATIENT BEDS: ALL PROGRAMMES OF CARE (Source DOH 2010 & 2022)

 249.7 Average available inpatient beds in Daisy Hill Acute Hospital, Newry.  [1st April 2009 to 31st March 2010].
221.1  Average available inpatient beds in Daisy Hill Acute Hospital, Newry.  [1st April 2021 to 31st March 2022].
In September 2023 – how many inpatient beds are left in Daisy Hill acute Hospital, Newry?

(B) INPATIENT BEDS: General Surgery: 1st April 2009 to 31st March 2010 (DOH 2010)

> General Surgery : Daisy Hill: 48.8 average available inpatient beds and 3,036 non elective inpatients
> General Surgery CAH: 85.9 average available inpatient beds and 3,727 non elective inpatients.

 (C) INPATIENT BEDS: General Surgery 1st April 2021 to 31st March 2022 (DOH 2022)
>General Surgery: Daisy Hill: 24.2 average available inpatient beds and 2,089 non elective inpatients
> General surgery: CAH: 70.5 average available inpatient beds and 3,008 non elective inpatients.
(Non elective inpatients =unplanned/emergency). ‘Average Available/Occupied Beds: The average number of available and occupied beds during the year in wards that are open overnight, measured at midnight. Hospitals may also have a number of beds in wards that are only open during the day. Beds reserved for day care admission or regular day admission are not included.’ (Source DOH 2022).

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SaveDaisyHillhospital.com and Daisy Hill for Life on Facebook have been created in partnership for the positive promotion of Daisy Hill Acute Hospital, Newry city and to promote the need for expansion of specialist acute services, staff, number of beds, and imaging equipment at Daisy Hill Acute Hospital, Newry city for now and the future.

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

WRITE FOR YOUR RIGHTS – 2 DAYS to GO! Defend Daisy Hill Hospital in Newry and its right to funding in Dept. of Health 2023-24 Budget 

DEFEND DAISY HILL HOSPITAL’S RIGHT TO FUDING IN DOH 2023-24 BUDGET

LINKS (just click on the Download buttons) :

Plus : the Previous versions V1 and V2 – (more Response Sheets/ Answer Suggestions)

These 5 versions can all be downloaded and used, if you want to use any of the info to assist you, or the answers just as they are for your own response to the Department’s call out for comments to this consultation pls see How to reply below. Consultation Deadline is this coming Monday 14th August 2023: 23.59pm.

WHY IS THIS CONSULTATION IMPORTANT?

The purpose of the Department of Health (DoH) is to improve the physical and mental health of people in NI; prevent, diagnose and treat illness; and improve the social wellbeing of the people of NI.  But the distribution of the £7.3 billion Budget allocated to the DoH in 2023-24 will not secure any improvement in diagnosis and treatment of illness and social wellbeing for the catchment population of Daisy Hill Specialist Acute hospital, Newry City.  

Even though Newry & District has the second highest number of patients on all of the 17 GP Registers in NI (with c.161,000 men, women and children), and has the third largest land mass (mostly rural) for the Ambulance Trust to cover,  Daisy Hill Specialist Acute hospital, Newry City, with 57,000 attendances to Accident and Emergency has yet again been left out of this £7.3  billion Public money budget (except for a proposal to give basic electrics for the hospital). 

We have to bring to the attention of the DoH that the Southern Trust once again removed timely life saving core services like Stroke and Emergency Surgery from Daisy Hill. Over 10,000 men women and children took part in the recent SOS Daisy Hill Hospital Committee Public Rally to object to removal of these vital core services. 

To date the Southern Trust has only submitted business plans for permanent diagnostic equipment plus previous Business Plans for a £400+ million new Hospital for Craigavon. They refuse to submit business plans to the Department for the NEW Hospital promised in 2005 by Peter Hain, in Newry, as their intention is to centralise all specialist acute services to Craigavon hospital.

People Power in Newry- Daisy Hill Hospital, Newry Saves Lives

DOH STATE THEY DO NOT HAVE THE POWER TO CEASE CRITICAL SERVICES

DOH Budget EQIA pg13/14 states Re Staff Pay Offer: “As highlighted above, the financial position does not therefore allow the Department to make a pay offer without implementing measures that would have an immediate detrimental impact on services to citizens. Our present analysis suggests that, to do so, WOULD REQUIRE DECISIONS TO CEASE CRITICAL SERVICES WHICH ARE BEYOND THE POWER THE DEPARTMENT TO MAKE.”

As it is beyond the power of the DOH  (as stated above) to make a decision to ‘cease critical services’ to citizens it was also beyond the power of the Southern Trust to cease providing critical  timely access to vital core life saving Regional services like Emergency Surgery and Stroke in Daisy Hill Acute Hospital.  This removal of critical core Emergency services has already had an adverse detrimental impact on c161,000 patients on GP Registers in Newry & District in the catchment area of Daisy Hill, Newry and their ability to access TIMELY specialist  acute inpatient hospital services.

>The only option left to us now is to answer the 3 Questions in this 2023 Doh Budget Allocation Consultation (pdf pgs 38,39) and challenge why Daisy Hill Acute Hospital, Newry City was left out by the DoH of Major Budget proposals and denied its fair share of NI’s allocation of £7.3 billion.

Major investment has unquestionably been allocated to other Acute hospitals across NI eg Ulster, Antrim, Altnagelvin, Royal, when other acute hospitals are ignored.  This is not equal treatment or improving the health and social wellbeing of the people from the catchment area of Daisy Hill, Newry.

YOUR RESPONSES WILL MAKE A DIFFERENCE because the DOH also says that Consultation responses will also be considered in targeting any additional funding that may become available during the financial year.

Instructions for those not used to replying to consultations through email

Save file to your device (rename the filename if you can) eg ‘Comments to DOH Budget EQIA Add intitals

Login to your Email, then Select Write New Email/Pen icon

Attach the renamed file to your email using the (paperclip icon/Insert/Attach option)

Type the recipients email address into the To field: Budget23-24response@health-ni.gov.uk  

Subject field : Response to DOH Budget 2023-24 Equality Impact Assessment / EQIA Consultation

Write a short message and Hit Send

Send your responses to Budget23-24response@health-ni.gov.uk by this coming Monday 14th August 2023: 23.59pm.

Reply notes:
Replying to this DOH Budget 2023-24 Consultation and Liking and Sharing these posts can help support all Daisy Hill Hospital campaigns. Thank you.    

References and Links

CONSULTATION LINKS

https://www.health-ni.gov.uk/sites/default/files/consultations/health/doh-budget-eqia-cons.pdf    Direct link to DOH Budget 2023-24 Consultation Qs ( see  Questions pdf pgs 38,39)

The aim of this strategic proposal is to try and protect services delivered directly to citizens as much as possible and through this minimise the impact on service delivery, patients and clients thereby protecting, as far as possible, services delivered to all section 75 groups.

Reading Notes/page numbers : Department of Health Budget 2023-24 Equality Impact Assessment Consultation Document typed Page number 8 is found at PDF page no.10 and page 18 numbered on the Consultation doc is found at PDF page no.20 when viewing on through a PDF reader.

Link to the Department of Health NI Consultation: Equality Impact Assessment of the 2023-24 Budget

https://www.health-ni.gov.uk/consultations/equality-impact-assessment-2023-24-budget-outcome    General link to DOH BUDGET Consultation

Other links

https://www.equalityni.org/ECNI/media/ECNI/Consultation%20Responses/2023/DoH-Budget2023-24EQIA-ECNIresponse.pdf     VG  Link to Consultation response from the Equality Commission.

https://www.niccy.org/wp-content/uploads/2023/07/NICCY-Advice-on-EQIA-on-Draft-DoH-Budget-2023-24.pdf
VG Link to Budget Consultation Response from Commissioner for Children and Young People (NICCY):  Advice on the Department of Health Draft Budget EQIA 2023-24 (p3)

 (Southern Trust Delivery Plan 2018/19 on the new Newry Community Treatment Centre. p97)*

++++++++++++++++++++++

POPULATION INFO LINK

*For important info on Misrepresented LGD population sizes at :  
https://savedaisyhillhospital.com/2023/07/01/playing-with-numbers-playing-with-peoples-lives/

The Equality Commission for NI

Links to Equal Commission & Children’s Commissioner Response

Response by the Equality Commission for Northern Ireland to the consultation by the Department of Health on its Budget 2023- 2024 Equality Impact Assessment

https://www.equalityni.org/budget

The Commissioner for Children and Young People (NICCY

The Commissioner for Children and Young People (NICCY) Advice on the Department of Health Draft Budget EQIA 2023-24 (30 June 2023)

Registrar General NI Link (which confirms although the 11 council model is in place since 2014, Health Trusts remain under the 26 council model). See below

https://www.nisra.gov.uk/sites/nisra.gov.uk/files/publications/Maps-of-NI-Health-Trusts-and-Local-Government-Districts.pdf     (see p 1& p2)
Link to Registrar General Northern Ireland Annual Report 2015 (Publication date: 31 August 2016)
Appendix 6 Northern Ireland’s Health & Social Care Trusts and Local Government Districts
Appendix 7 Northern Ireland’s 11 Local Government Districts 2015

>CONSULTATION DEADLINE: This important DOH EQIA Budget Consultation is open until this coming Monday 14th August 2023: 23.59pm.

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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Help for your response to: Dept of Health Equality Impact Assessment of 2023-24 Budget Consultation available here

Downloadable Information Sheets with pre-written Response ideas to help answer this Budget Consultation are NOW AVAILABLE – to respond to the Dept of Health’s request for comments to their Equality Assessment of the 2023-24 Budget Outcome

The Department of Health cannot commit one penny of funding towards Health and Social care in Newry & Mourne or at Daisy Hill Hospital unless the Southern Trust asks for it by putting it into their Business Plans and submitting to the Department of Health.

As the Southern Trust have NOT asked or proposed any proper funding for Daisy Hill Hospital, Newry in this Budget – We the people need to speak up and ask instead through this Public Consultation

The 2023-24 Budget EQIA Consultation Deadline is Mon 14th August, so the campaign for fair treatment for Daisy Hill acute Hospital continues, with a renewed call for action for the people of Newry & Mourne, (which includes South Armagh and South Down) and surrounding areas. Please take part and write for your rights.

Based on demographics and other factors, Newry should be confirmed as a location for a new specialised Acute Hospital building so these Response/Comment Sheets to the Equality Assessment of the 2023-24 Budget Outcome are now ready to Download and read for sending responses back to the Department of Health.

To assist you – various information sources including some very good Budget Consultation Responses from the Equality Commission NI and from NI Commissioner for Children and Young People (NICCY) are available from the references section below at the bottom of the article.

What difference will it make if I take part in this Consultation?

Will it make any difference if I take part in this consultation?

Yes, because if you read the quote below from the Consultation Document from the Department of Health it states:

So if you do not ask – you will not get – but if you ask and make a good deserving case for – we could get the additional funding that Newry & Mourne LGD has needed for a long time for its large population and for its acute Hospital – at Daisy Hill, Newry. As you know, Newry & Mourne has always been the highest LGD population, with the largest population of children in the Southern Trust area. This must be recognised in this Budget.

Quote below from the Department of Health Budget 2023-24 Equality Impact Assessment Document, p31 (p33 pdf page number) shows that the Department is actively seeking for all citizens to comment on these funding proposals. If we have Equality concerns – we must tell them so they can act on them.

Thank you! Let us keep up the long running campaign to speak up for Daisy Hill Hospital, the acute Hospital for Newry & Mourne (which includes South Armagh)

Detailed info on the importance of this Consultation is described on Daisy Hill for life website at :

The Department of Health explain the Consultation as follows on their website:

“The Equality Impact Assessment of the 2023-24 Budget Outcome Consultation opened on 22 May 2023. Closing date 14 August 2023 at 23:59.
Summary
The 2023-24 Budget was announced by the NI Secretary of State on the 27 April 2023. The Budget provides the proposed Resource and Capital investment funding allocations to departments for the 2023-24 financial year. The Department of Health’s Equality Impact Assessment document provides an Equality Impact Assessment of the 2023-24 Budget Outcome for the Department, and we are seeking your comments on the equality implications.

CONSULTATION LINKS and USEFUL REFERENCES

https://www.health-ni.gov.uk/sites/default/files/consultations/health/doh-budget-eqia-cons.pdf    Direct link to Consultation Qs

Link to the Full Equality Impact Assessment of the 2023-24 Budget Consultation on the Department of Health Website: https://www.health-ni.gov.uk/consultations/equality-impact-assessment-2023-24-budget-outcome

https://www.equalityni.org/ECNI/media/ECNI/Consultation%20Responses/2023/DoH-Budget2023-24EQIA-ECNIresponse.pdf    Link to very good Consultation response from the NI Equality Commission.

https://www.niccy.org/wp-content/uploads/2023/07/NICCY-Advice-on-EQIA-on-Draft-DoH-Budget-2023-24.pdf     Link to very good Budget Consultation Response from NI Commissioner for Children and Young People (NICCY):  Advice on the Department of Health Draft Budget EQIA 2023-24

Link to the Southern Trust Delivery Plan 2018/19 on plans for the new Newry Community Treatment Centre. p97)* 

POPULATION INFO LINK
*For important info on Misrepresented population LGD sizes at :  
https://savedaisyhillhospital.com/2023/07/01/playing-with-numbers-playing-with-peoples-lives/

COUNCILS INFO LINK

Registrar General NI Link (which confirms although the 11 council model is in place since April 2015, Health Trusts remain under the former 26 council model). See below

https://www.nisra.gov.uk/sites/nisra.gov.uk/files/publications/Maps-of-NI-Health-Trusts-and-Local-Government-Districts.pdf     (see p 1& p2)
Link to Registrar General Northern Ireland Annual Report 2015 (Publication date: 31 August 2016)
Appendix 6 Northern Ireland’s Health & Social Care Trusts and Local Government Districts
Appendix 7 Northern Ireland’s 11 Local Government Districts 2015

Link to Rural Needs Act:  https://www.legislation.gov.uk/nia/2016/19/pdfs/nia_20160019_en.pdf

End of links  

Daisy Hill Hospital, Newry Saves Lives - People Power 2023

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Email Address:


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HEALTH BUDGET 2023-24: EQUALITY CHECK – Your Right to Reply & Ask for Funding for New Specialist Acute Hospital in Newry City

In the Dept of Health NI Budget 2023-24 document - Business Plans should have been submitted for the major construction of a New Specialist Acute Hospital development in Newry city– instead of a Community Treatment Centre.

The Department of Health Budget 2023-24 proposes extra bed capacity & equipment for Craigavon Hospital, as a critical capital scheme, but in complete contrast the Budget proposal for Newry city is to start the construction of a Newry Community Treatment and Care Centre, rather than extra bed capacity or equipment at Daisy Hill Hospital in Newry.

So why is this Community Treatment and Care Centre for Newry expressed as a Dept. Of Health critical capital priority scheme when Daisy Hill Hospital is not?

The Department of Health cannot commit one penny of funding towards Health and Social care in Newry & Mourne or at Daisy Hill Hospital unless the Southern Trust asks for it by putting it into their Business Plans and submitting to the Department of Health.

As the Southern Trust have NOT asked or proposed any proper funding for Daisy Hill Hospital, Newry in this Budget – We the people need to speak up and ask instead through this Public Consultation.

Based on accurate population plans –as Newry & Mourne LGD has always had the Highest population in the Southern Trust, Business Plans should have been submitted for the major construction of a New Specialist Acute Hospital development in Newry city– instead of a Community Treatment Centre. This is the feedback the Department of Health need to hear.

The Department of Health have asked for Public Feedback on their 2023/24 Budget proposals Equality Impact Assessment Document (Ref 1) We must use this opportunity to get straight to the decision makers, as to how our public money is being spent and its impact on our future health and economic survival.

Rally and another show of strength for Daisy Hill Acute Hospital, Newry city 25.06.2023

BUDGET PROPOSALS 2023/4 – HOW IT AFFECTS YOU: THE PROPOSED NEWRY COMMUNITY TREATMENT AND CARE CENTRE – EXPLAINED IN THE TRUST’S OWN WORDS

“The Trust is continuing to progress plans for a Health and Care centre in Newry which will support the shift of Acute services primarily from Daisy Hill Hospital to a community facility.”

Quote above from the Southern Trust Delivery Plan 2018/19 on the new Newry Community Treatment Centre. p97

The Southern Trust Delivery Plan 2018-19 (Ref 2) is available to download from the References and Links section at the end of this article.

NEWRY COMMUNITY TREATMENT CENTRE TO BE PRIVATELY FINANCED AND CONTRACTED OUT FOR 25 YEARS

The Community Treatment and Care centre for Newry proposal first appeared as a plan in the ‘Transforming Your Care’ Health Reform in 2013. This Newry Community Treatment Centre would NOT be financed using public capital funds like those in Portadown or Banbridge, but would instead be funded by the private sector.

The Southern Trust described this finance deal as a: ‘novel/untested type of procurement known as Third Party Development (3PD)’

As verified from another source, the Strategic Investment Board (Ref 4 in Links list) states :

ORIGINAL PLAN FOR A NEWRY COMMUNITY TREATMENT CENTRE BASED ON MISREPRESENTED POPULATION SIZES

The Southern Trust plan for a new Community Treatment and Care Centre in Newry first appeared c.2013 when it was encouraged by the Health Minister in charge of the ‘Transforming Your Care’ Health Reform. (TYC)

This TYC Health Reform was informed by the Southern Locality Population Plan and Tables which misrepresented the population sizes of the 5 Localities (LGDs) in the Southern Trust area.

In these ‘population plans’ the Newry & Mourne LGD was incorrectly represented as the smallest locality in the Southern Trust, instead of correctly showing it as the Locality (LGD) with the highest population in the Southern Trust and the smaller population of Craigavon LGD population size was enhanced by adding it to Banbridge LGD population. (for details on this – See Ref 3 link at very end of article below).

This population size misrepresentation / error has had implications on funding decisions ever since.

Based on accurate population plans –as Newry & Mourne LGD has always had the highest Locality/LGD population in the Southern Trust, business plans should have been submitted for the major construction of a New Specialist Acute Hospital development in Newry – instead of just proposals to build a privately funded Newry Community Treatment Centre.

Daisy Hill acute Hospital in Newry city has no nearby alternative Hospital and has no alternative support Hospital, unlike Craigavon which has 2 non acute support Hospitals, (Lurgan 2 miles away and South Tyrone).

The population of Craigavon are 20 minutes motorway journey from Belfast and from several major acute hospitals in Belfast city and in nearby Ulster Hospital. Newry city needs its designated acute hospital as well as a Community Treatment Centre just like Craigavon in Portadown.

EQUALITY CHECKS FOR THESE BUDGET PROPOSALS – THIS IS WHAT DEMOCRACY LOOKS LIKE

You can use your democratic right to express your opinions on how the money is spent by taking part in this consultation on the Budget Equality Document.

If you want to give your views on how the Department of Health here proposes to spend your hard earned Public Money on Health Services and where these future services exist, contributing to health, the economy and job prospects both medical and construction and all associated jobs linked to a hospital – this is your chance.

Time for Investment for Newry & District 2023

This Department of Health Budget EQIA 2023-24 which proposes extra bed capacity & equipment for Craigavon Hospital, should also have had equivalent funding for a new Specialist Acute Hospital building for Newry city, for its large population to keep in line with Equality and Rural Needs Legislation. This important Budget Consultation is open until Monday 14th August 2023.

Short Suggested Answers to this Consultation (along with reasons) will be presented on Daisy for Life on facebook and on this website very very soon at https://savedaisyhillhospital.com/posts/

Liking and Sharing these posts can help support the campaign. Thank you.

REFERENCES AND LINKS

CONSULTATION LINK

Ref 1: Link to the Department of Health NI Consultation: Equality Impact Assessment of the 2023-24 Budget Outcome:

https://www.health-ni.gov.uk/consultations/equality-impact-assessment-2023-24-budget-outcome

Ref 2: The Southern Trust Delivery Plan 2018-19, See p97 Click on the Download button below:

POPULATION INFO LINK

Ref 3 : For important info on Misrepresented population LGD sizes in the Southern Trust area at :

https://savedaisyhillhospital.com/2023/07/01/playing-with-numbers-playing-with-peoples-lives/

NEWRY COMMUNITY TREATMENT CENTRE TO BE 3PD (THIRD PARTY /PRIVATELY DEVELOPED) LINK

Ref 4: The Strategic Investment Board’s website describes the plan that the Newry Community Treatment Centre would be funded as a third party development: “Two pathfinder hub schemes (Newry and Lisburn) were identified in 2013 to test the Third Party Development (3PD) approach” Read the full article from this link: Strategic Investment Board NI -project -3pd-primary-and-community-care-programme/

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

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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MONEY! MONEY! PUBLIC MONEY! 

Nearly 945 Million Pounds for the whole of the Southern Trust in 2021-2. Nearly How much of this c. £945 million was spent on Specialist Acute Inpatient Services and Emergency Services in Daisy Hill Acute Hospital, Newry in 2021 -2022?

Hospital services are paid for with public money – funded by your Regional rates, Taxes and National Insurance Contributions. In 2021/22 The Southern Trust had an income of £944,707,000* (nearly £945 million).  Management costs were £29,092,000* (c £29.1 million).   

>How much of this c. £945 million was spent on Specialist Acute Inpatient Services and Emergency Services in Daisy Hill Acute Hospital, Newry in 2021 -2022? 

>How much of this c. £945 million was spent on Specialist Acute Inpatient Services and Emergency Services in Craigavon Hospital in 2021 -2022?

>Are Newry & Mourne population (the largest LGD /locality population in the Southern Trust) getting VALUE FOR MONEY?

Redress the unbalanced NI Stroke Consultation 2019 - additional Options needed to include the Excluded populations.

There are TWO Government designated Acute Hospitals in the Southern Trust – the longest established is Daisy Hill Hospital, Newry city which is situated in the Newry & Mourne LGD –CONSISTENTLY THE HIGHEST LOCALITY/LGD population in the Southern Trust.

Newry & Mourne, South Armagh Acute Area Hospital at Daisy Hill, in Newry city
Graphic by Daisy Hill for life

The second Acute Hospital is Craigavon Hospital in Portadown (situated in Craigavon LGD -the second largest locality population in the Southern Trust area, where Newry & Mourne LGD is the highest population)

CRAIGAVON HOSPITAL REDEVELOPMENT PRIORITISED AGAIN (p43 OF SOUTHERN TRUST LATEST ANNUAL REPORT)

The Southern Trust Annual Report & Accounts 2021-22 gives information on how much is being spent overall in the Southern Trust – but the public need to know that the money is being spent FAIRLY across its acute hospitals according to population size/need.  

The public need to know this especially because Craigavon Hospital redevelopment once again gets prioritized in the Southern Trust 10 year Capital Long term Expenditure Plans (p43) but despite the long overdue population-based need and requirement in Newry & Mourne –there is NO MENTION of Long Term Expenditure Plans for the Redevelopment of Daisy Hill Hospital , Newry city, in this same 10 year review of capital priorities statement, as shown quoted below:

“as part of a 10 year review of capital priorities, the Southern HSC Trust has identified a need for investment in excess of some £430m. THIS INCLUDES REDEVELOPMENT OF CRAIGAVON AREA HOSPITAL together with much needed infrastructure, backlog maintenance and diagnostic equipment requirements.”

Southern Trust Annual Report & Accounts 2021-22 p43

This Southern Trust Annual Report and Accounts 2021-22 can be accessed and read in full from the link at the end of the article under Background and References.

IMPORTANT: WHCH LOCALITIES (LGDs) ARE INCLUDED IN THE SOUTHERN TRUST AREA?

IN LEGAL TERMS the Southern Trust area includes ONLY 5 (former) LGDs of (1) Newry & Mourne, (2) Craigavon, (3) Armagh, (4)Dungannon and (5) Banbridge. (Ref: Establishment Order 2006)

The 2006 Order also makes it very clear that accommodation and services should be provided in each of six named hospitals, with addresses, including Daisy Hill, Newry.  It does not say all hospital accommodation and services should be centralised to Craigavon only as the Southern Trust are determined to do.

The operational area of the Southern Trust is NOT Armagh, Banbridge and Craigavon; Mid-Ulster; and Newry, Mourne and Down council – This Southern Trust Annual Report has got this wrong on the Southern Trust operational area on p9 of the Southern Trust Annual Report & Accounts 2021/22.

Important:

In Legislation ‘Down’ is in the operational area of the South Eastern Trust and ‘Mid Ulster’ (Cookstown and Magherafelt) are in the Northern Trust.

HEALTH SERVICES COMMISSIONING

The number of people living within a locality (LGD) and assessed population need is supposed to be the primary factor when commissioning health Services so as Newry & Mourne LGD is the highest locality population in the Southern Trust – this should also be reflected in the funding spent on Daisy Hill Acute Hospital, Newry and its Specialist Acute Inpatient services and Emergency services.

Time for Investment in Newry and Mourne LGD's acute Hospital Daisy Hill

Daisy Hill Hospital, Newry was designated in its own right one of the 9 major Acute Hospitals in NI since 2003 (as part of Developing Better Services). As such it is entitled to funding for a fully functioning acute hospital with 24/7 Consultant Led Accident and Emergency Services and 24 /7 Consultant Led Maternity Services.

It was not designated as a ‘support or local hospital’ to Craigavon (as the Southern Trust nominated it to be in 2010) or designated just as a regional elective centre as has been decided without any form of Consultation WITH THE PEOPLE WHO ARE PAYING FOR a fully functioning acute hospital.

Newry & Mourne LGD needs re-imbursement for Hospital funding due to population plan errors in the Southern Trust area > For vitally important information and explanation why Daisy Hill, Newry requires this re-imbursement for Hospital funding due to crucial errors -see the Daisy Hill for Life website – by clicking on the picture LINK below:

BACKGROUND AND REFERENCE

 (* Source: Southern Trust SHSCT Annual Report & Accounts 2021-22 for the year ended 31 March 2022 (pg 115, 43, 9)
Link below: https://southerntrust.hscni.net/about-us/annual-reports/


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

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.

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You may also be interested in other posts on Daisy Hill Acute Hospital, Newry city, like: https://savedaisyhillhospital.com/2022/02/28/daisy-hill-hospital-newry-is-one-of-the-nine-major-acute-hospitals-in-the-regional-network-designated-in-2003-like-antrim-ulster-etc/

PLAYING WITH NUMBERS, PLAYING WITH PEOPLE’S LIVES

In a crucially important Population Plan Table*, created in 2013 for the influential ‘Transforming Your Care’ Health Review – Newry & Mourne Local Government District was made to look like the smallest population in Southern Trust area when it was really the largest.

This misinformation was used to plan future Acute Hospital services for the Southern Trust area and the rest of NI and is still being used today – so this error is why Newry & Mourne LGD and Daisy Hill Acute Hospital have been placed at the back of the queue for hospital buildings and specialist acute inpatient services for years, despite Newry & Mourne LGD being the HIGHEST LGD population in the Southern Trust area since it was formed in 2007.

WHAT IS WRONG WITH THIS TABLE?

This population plan table (shown in the graphic) implies that Newry & Mourne local government district (LGD) has the smallest Locality population in the Southern Trust area.  But this is wrong because Newry & Mourne was NOT the smallest population – it was the LARGEST (and still is).

Whoever compiled this Southern Locality Population Plan Table* incorrectly displayed the standardised NISRA population figures of the Southern Trust area and by doing this –masked the true population sizes of the five Localities / LGDs in the Southern Trust area. The effects of this misinformation are still being felt today.

WHERE DID THIS TABLE COME FROM? 

In 2011/12 as Part of the Transforming Your Care (TYC) Health Review and Consultation, the Health Minister asked the 5 NI Local Commissioning Groups for Draft Population Plans for each of their areas to assess the population in each Local Government District (LGD or locality) across NI to reflect local needs. “Population planning and local commissioning to be the central approach for organising services and delivering change.” (p8 TYC).

This Table is reproduced from the Southern Local Commissioning Group Locality -Population Plan ‘Changing For A Better Future’ 2013 Report on p18.* (A copy is available to download from the References section at the end of the article)

The Southern Local Commissioning Group (SLCG) created this Population Plan Report in conjunction with the Southern Trust which outlined how they jointly intended to commission and provide health and social care services in the Southern Trust area.

This information in this Population Plan was used for decision making in the Public Consultation on Transforming Your Care (TYC) Health Review.

EXPLAINING THIS POPULATION PLAN TABLE AND WHY IT IS SO IMPORTANT TODAY

The Table* shown from the 2013 Population Plan Report presents the Population sizes of all 5 local government districts in the Southern Trust in a very distorted way. There are FIVE Localities or local government district LGDs named in the Southern Trust area, they are:

(1) Newry & Mourne LGD, (2) Banbridge LGD; (3) Dungannon LGD; (4)Craigavon LGD and (5) Armagh LGD.

WHAT IS WRONG WITH THIS TABLE?

This population plan table (reproduced in the graphic) implies that Newry & Mourne local government district (LGD) has the SMALLEST locality population in the Southern Trust area.  But this is wrong because Newry & Mourne was NOT the smallest population – it was the LARGEST (99,900) in the table (and still is the largest today with a population of 106,813 people in 2020).

So whoever compiled this Southern Locality Population Plan Table incorrectly displayed the standardised NISRA population figures of the Southern Trust area and by doing this – masked the true population sizes.

MASKING OF TRUE POPULATION SIZES

To understand this distortion of locality/LGD  population size as displayed in the reproduced Table, please look at the BRIGHT BLUE ROW OF HEADINGS shown on the Graphic.

First start with the first column named:

YEAR– then > go along to the Next Column: ARMAGH/DUNGANNON >then next Column: CRAIGAVON/BANBRIDGE then > next column: NEWRY/MOURNE

These Headings are misleading as the places named are TWO local government districts grouped and added together in one column – that is until you get to the fourth column which instead displays only one local government District instead of two LGDs like the other columns before it.  

So the grouped double LGDs are compared against one single LGD. This single LGD is Newry & Mourne LGD which is being compared inaccurately and misrepresented so it appears as the smallest population.

IN DETAIL

The second column in the Table adds the population of the 2 local government districts of Armagh LGD and Dungannon LGD together in one column to form a higher combined population total (117,100) than the Newry & Mourne LGD population which appears as one LGD on its own in the third column. (99,900)

Armagh LGD + Dungannon LGD =117,100

Compared against

Newry & Mourne LGD = 99,900

The third column again adds TWO LGD populations together – it adds Craigavon LGD and Banbridge LGD together in one column to give a COMBINED population Total (141,600) and then this Total figure is then compared alongside the single local government district of Newry & Mourne population, (99,900) which appears again on its own as ONE LGD.

Craigavon LGD + Banbridge LGD =141,600

Compared against

Newry & Mourne LGD = 99,900

Of course 2 local government district populations added together are likely to be much higher than one single LGD even if the single LGD is the largest population, but this is not a fair use or acceptable standardised practice, and Newry & Mourne is losing out because of it.

The former 26 Councils or Local Government Districts (LGDS) or localities are still named in legislation and remain as the Operational area of NI Health Trusts (Establishment Order 2006) and Commissioning Groups. In the Southern Trust area. (See Background and References for more information)

The Graphic titled FACT below shows how the populations of the 5 LGDs in the Southern Trust should have been shown if represented fairly and accurately: it is obvious from this accurate representation using the official standardised NISRA statistics that Newry & Mourne LGD is the largest Locality population in the operational area of the Southern Health and Social Care Trust.

THERE ARE FIVE LOCALITIES OR LOCAL GOVERNMENT DISTRICT LGDS NAMED IN THE SOUTHERN TRUST AREA NOT THREE!

The original Population Plan Table* from the Southern Local Commissioning Group Locality -Population Plan Report also gave the impression that there are only THREE localities or local Government Districts in the Southern Trust/Commissioning area and wrongly implies Newry & Mourne Local Government District has the least need, instead of correctly stating that there are FIVE localities in the Southern Trust with Newry & Mourne being largest population with greatest need.

This misinformation about the size of the Newry & Mourne LGD and the other LGDs in the Southern Trust area was presented to the decision makers in charge of planning future hospital services in the Transforming Your Care Review.

This TYC Review made it clear that there should only be 5-7 Acute Hospital networks for the entire population of NI. This Review knew there would be a huge interest in Acute Hospital sites and their future role and outlined that the final functionality of each of the (hospital) facilities will be based on POPULATION NEED and the principles set out in the report. (p116 TYC).

The Transforming Your Care Health Review was a population based planning of Services which then formed the foundation for many future Health Reviews which followed including Delivering Together, Donaldson, and the Bengoa Report.

WHAT CAN BE DONE? – POPULATION NEEDS ASSESSMENTS AND HOSPITAL FUNDING

This misinformation as presented in the table* was used to plan the current Acute Hospital services in the Southern Trust area and the rest of NI and is still used today.

This error will have been a major reason why Newry & Mourne LGD and Daisy Hill Acute Hospital have been placed at the back of the queue for hospital buildings and specialist acute inpatient services for many years, despite Newry & Mourne LGD being the HIGHEST LGD population in the Southern Trust area since it was formed in 2007, and the fourth Highest Locality (LGD) population in all of NI since 1971 with Belfast, Lisburn (Greater Belfast) and Derry.

This injustice must be rectified now by the DOH as discussions take place about the future Hospitals services here.

Acute hospital-Emergency entrance

ACTION NEEDED TO REPAIR THE DAMAGE DONE BY POPULATION PLANNING MISINFORMATION 

Newry & Mourne Acute Area Hospital at Daisy Hill needs re-imbursement for the years of lost funding (when they were placed bottom of the Queue) and return of inpatient beds and specialist services, in a fully functioning Major Acute Specialist Hospital (as designated by Government in 2003 and again earmarked for a major new acute hospital in 2005) which has still not been delivered by the Southern Trust and Department of Health 18 years later.

The Population Plan Table* – which in effect was a population needs assessment reveals why Daisy Hill is being wrongly treated as a ‘small local’ hospital today.   

ACTIONS NEEDED

As verified by official NISRA statistics, for over 50 YEARS since 1971, Newry & Mourne LGD has ranked in the TOP 4 HIGHEST POPULATIONS in NI with Belfast, Lisburn (Greater Belfast) and Derry.  

The number of people living within a locality (LGD) is supposed to be the primary factor when commissioning health Services so the misrepresentation of population sizes which continues today in population planning in Southern Trust must be corrected urgently.  

So, in order to repair the damage done by this misinformation in 2013, which made Newry & Mourne LGD appear wrongly as the smallest LGD instead of the largest in the Southern Trust area there are two actions needed:

1. The Southern Trust and Southern Local Commissioning Group must stop putting forward the misleading idea that there are 3 localities in the Southern Trust when we know there are really 5 localities (LGDs). The population sizes of the Southern Trust area must be presented accurately acknowledging that Newry & Moure (single LGD) is the largest LGD/locality of the FIVE localities in the Southern Trust.

2. All Public Consultations (at both Regional and at Southern Trust level) must be based on accurate population size and accurately assessed population need. All Consultations (including the EQIA) must be population evidence based including for Emergency services (Emergency Surgery, Stroke, specialist acute services and reduction in status to a Regional elective Centre).

This should be organised by the Department of Health, The Strategic Planning and Performance Group, Public Health Agency and Southern Trust in the spending of scarce capital resources and decisions on spending on Hospitals (which have been paid for with public money). The public should have right to reply and challenge centralisation of services and when their hospital is used as a case study for closure.

Newry Mourne & Down Council, MPS, MLAs and the community all can be confident in the knowledge that Newry & Mourne LGD has been short changed and is long overdue the required investment in a major Specialist Acute Hospital in Newry City instead being bartered off with a Regional Elective centre or privatised Community Health Centre instead of a Major Specialist Acute hospital with a 24/7 Consultant- Led Type 1 Emergency Department & Consultant- Led Maternity.

Newry South Down and South Armagh Area Hospital -Daisy Hill, Newry City.

BACKGROUND AND REFERENCES

THE ORGANISATION OF NI HEALTH CARE IS STILL UNDER THE 26 COUNCIL MODEL

Operational areas in Health trusts still remain under the 26 council model.

The former 26 Councils or Local Government Districts (LGDS) or localities are still named in legislation and remain as the Operational area of NI Health Trusts (Establishment Order 2006) and Commissioning Groups. In the Southern Trust area.

The Five LGDs in Southern Trust in consistent order of size since Establishment of the Southern Trust on 1st April 2007 according to NISRA are:

>1st Newry & Mourne;

>2nd Craigavon;

>3rd Armagh:

>4th Dungannon:

>5th Banbridge

SoS Daisy Hill Hospital Campaign Rally - another show of community strength in Newry city on 25.06.2023. Estimated 10,000 attended the Rally in Marcus Square, Newry and then walked up to Daisy Hill Acute Hospital.

NEWRY & MOURNE LGD POPULATION

As verified by official NISRA statistics, for over 50 YEARS since 1971, Newry & Mourne LGD has ranked in the TOP 4 HIGHEST POPULATIONS in NI with Belfast, Lisburn (Greater Belfast) and Derry.

Based on population size, Daisy Hill should have a major Hospital the same size as Altnagelvin as its population size is very similar, and based on both population size, number of patients on GP Registers (c161,000)  and on its location -Daisy Hill should have a larger Specialist Acute hospital than Antrim, Craigavon, or Ulster Hospitals. Why? Because Newry & Mourne LGD has a population bigger than Antrim LGD, Castlereagh LGD, and also Craigavon LGD, who all have major acute hospitals already.

The Newry & Mourne LGD and Daisy Hill acute Hospital cannot be ignored any longer as there are many factors which require proper hospital services funding and commissioning in this area (1) it has the large population, (2) the highest number of births, (3) the Location

REFERENCES

Other References

Transforming Your Care : https://www.health-ni.gov.uk/topics/health-policy/transforming-your-care#toc-0

Transforming Your Care (TYC):  Vision to Action. A Consultation Document 9th Oct 2012 to 15th Jan 2013.

Transforming Your Care (TYC) : Vision to Action – A post Consultation Report  March – 2013 

The TYC Consultation Document ‘ Vision to Action’ was “based on the draft Population Plans which have been developed by Local Commissioning Groups with input from HSC Trusts, to reflect local needs and a Draft Strategic Implementation Plan which gives a wider NI overview.” (p3 Vision to Action. A Consultation Document 9th Oct 2012 to 15th Jan 2013).

“Population planning and local commissioning to be the central approach for organising services and delivering change.” (p8 TYC)

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.

You can also read, like and share this post on Facebook at : Playing with numbers, playing with people’s lives

You may also be interested in other posts on Daisy Hill Acute Hospital, Newry city, like: https://savedaisyhillhospital.com/2022/02/28/daisy-hill-hospital-newry-is-one-of-the-nine-major-acute-hospitals-in-the-regional-network-designated-in-2003-like-antrim-ulster-etc/

Daisy Hill Hospital for Life


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

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