NI Stroke Consultation 2019: ‘TIME IS BRAIN’ – URBAN and RURAL

Time is Brain - Urban and Rural -None of the Options in the NI Stroke Consultattion are best for all of NI. Every minute matters during a stroke says London Stroke Strategy.

Stroke is a crucially time dependant 999 Emergency Service for ALL the POPULATION of Northern Ireland – no matter where they live – URBAN or RURAL. The location of stroke units is vitally important so that immediate access is available for ALL.

HSCNI Reshaping Stroke Care proposals 2019 do not reflect the URGENCY of the complete stroke pathway – especially from ONSET OF STROKE TO ARRIVAL IN HOSPITAL for ALL the population of Northern Ireland.

> Every delay in time in treating stroke patients will cost lives – not save lives.

The Royal College of Physicians states the best outcome for patients is achieved when the time from onset of Stroke to treatment is as SHORT as possible:

“So the more we can do both to reduce the time taken from the start of symptoms to arrival in hospital, and from arrival in hospital to treatment, the less disability people will suffer.”

[Royal College of Physicians SSNAP Report 2016.]

Newry Mourne and Down (which includes South Armagh) is the 3rd highest population in Northern Ireland with a population of 179,000 (105,000 living in a rural area).

Why does this local government district and other rural areas in Northern Ireland have to COMPROMISE YET AGAIN for life saving 999 EMERGENCY services, while all 6 proposed options in the Consultation include: Belfast, Derry and Craigavon.

Belfast, Derry and Craigavon areas do not even need to answer the consultation document, because in this Department of Health Stroke Consultation, Reshaping Stroke Care 2019’, they are guaranteed a Hyperacute Stroke Unit co located with Acute Stroke Unit on their doorstep.

CONCLUSION
Nothing justifies the removal of Stroke services from the long established combined specialist Acute Stroke/ Rehabilitation Unit in Daisy Hill Hospital, Newry City (the only one of its kind in the Southern Trust).

OPTIONS
Daisy Hill Hospital’s Specialist Stroke Unit in Newry must feature in the proposed 2019 NI Stroke Consultation Options.

It must be retained and enhanced to a Hyperacute Stroke Unit co-located with an Acute Stroke Unit as part of the LONG TERM future plan for Stroke Services in NI- so the dedicated staff can continue to save lives and reduce disability if the DoH NI wants to save lives with better outcomes.

For more info on this topic – see https://savedaisyhillhospital.com/2019/05/05/ni-stroke-consultation-2019-overview/ and
https://savedaisyhillhospital.com/2019/05/05/ni-consultation-document-does-not-fully-follow-the-research-evidence-referred-to/

You can follow the Daisy Hill Acute Hospital campaign also by visiting and liking our Facebook page at https://www.facebook.com/daisyhillforlife/ – Thank you.

QUESTION OF TRUST – comparing Southern and Western Trust’s Stroke Proposals for NI

Just as in the Western Trust (with a total population of 301,448*) there is need for TWO Specialist Acute Stroke Units - so too, the Southern Trust (with a larger population of 380,312*) is also entitled to TWO Specialist Stroke Units (HASUs and Acute Stroke Units), at Daisy Hill Hospital, Newry and Craigavon Hospital. This would ensure that everyone in the Southern Trust has immediate access to CT scanning and life saving thrombolysis, followed by direct access into a stroke unit.

One of the Functions of the Southern Health and Social Care Trust under the 2006 Establishment Order is to PROVIDE SERVICES – (not take away existing services) to the population of the five former Local Government Districts (LGD)s  or Localities of            (1) Newry & Mourne LGD  (105,161); (2)Craigavon LGD (100,310); (3)Armagh LGD (62,427); (4) Dungannon LGD (62,149) and (5) Banbridge LGD (50,265).

The Southern Trust have a duty of care to plan provision of services in equal measure to all 380,312* people under their care.

Proof that the future configuration of Hyperacute and Acute stroke Units in the Northern Ireland Stroke Consultation Document 2019 was decided not only by the Department of Health, but also by all of the Health Trusts in NI,  can be seen from the Western Trust website which states:-

‘Speaking ahead of the meeting of the Western Trust Board this week, Dr Anne Kilgallen, Western Trust Chief Executive said:

“The Department of Health is leading on the Stroke Consultation and all Health and  Social Care Trusts have been actively involved in the discussions in preparation. We in the Western Trust are very pleased that both the South West Acute and Altnagelvin Hospitals are part of the options being considered.”‘

If only it could be said that the Southern Trust were also actively involved in discussions and preparations to make sure that the existing Specialist combined Acute Stroke /Rehabilitation Unit in Daisy Hill, Newry City (in the largest locality in the Southern Trust) was being put forward as a vital Hyperacute Stroke Unit, co-located with an Acute Stroke in the future network of specialist Stroke Units in NI.

Compare how inclusively the Western Health and Social Care Trust have reassured their staff and population of 301,448*, that they are doing their best to retain and enhance their TWO ACUTE STROKE UNITS in Altnagelvin Hospital in Derry and the South West hospital in Enniskillen, with the Southern Trust’s approach.

The Southern Trust (SHSCT), has consistently pushed forward at every opportunity, removal of vital life saving stroke services from Daisy Hill, out of reach to Craigavon in their Centralisation Programme of all specialist services to Craigavon.   (Even the 2016 Bengoa Report’s only Local Case Study promoted SHSCTs proposal to centralise all Stroke services to Craigavon and remove them forever from Daisy Hill, Newry City).

Because of this, Daisy Hill Acute Hospital, Newry City specialist combined Acute/Rehabilitation Stroke Unit, (in the largest of the five Local Government Districts in the Southern Trust), does not even warrant a mention on the list of options given in the Northern Ireland Stroke Consultation 2019.

A HASU and ASU is proposed for Craigavon, not on one, but on ALL SIX OPTIONS. It is clear from this, that nobody seems to have spoken out for provision of Stroke services in NEWRY CITY.

It also shows that the SHSCT are proposing to continue with their plans to withdraw existing life saving specialist Acute Stroke and Stroke Rehabilitation Services from Daisy Hill Acute Hospital, without making any provision of a NEARBY alternative Specialist Stroke Unit. They are required to do this under equality of access to provide EMERGENCY timely life saving specialist services e.g. CT scanning, thrombolysis, etc and acute Stroke Rehabilitation.

CONCLUSION

Just as in the Western Trust (with a total population of 301,448*) there is need for TWO Specialist Acute Stroke Units – so too, the Southern Trust (with a LARGER population of 380,312*) is also entitled to TWO Specialist Stroke Units (HASUs and Acute Stroke Units).

This would ensure that everyone in the Southern Trust has, as they have at present, immediate access to CT scanning and life saving thrombolysis, followed by direct access into a stroke unit – the stroke pathway recommended by The Royal College of Physicians for better outcomes.

>The Southern Trust need at this stage to speak up for ALL the population they are duty bound to provide specialist stroke services for in the future stroke network in Northern Ireland, in the same inclusive manner as the Western Trust.

*NISRA 2017

Southern Trust population 380,312 : Western Trust population 301,448  : NISRA 2017

Sources: http://www.westerntrust.hscni.net/about/3857.htm

NI Stroke Consultation: Presenting an extra Option to include the EXCLUDED populations

Q6 SUGGESTED ANSWER : 5 Hyperacute Stroke Units (HASUs) and 5 Acute Stroke Units (ASUs) at 5 acute hospitals in NI at: (1)Royal Victoria, Belfast; (2) Daisy Hill Hospital, Newry, (3)South West, Enniskillen (4)Altnagelvin, Derry and (5)Causeway Hospital, Coleraine. This option is based on existing acute stroke units that already give specialist CT scanning and Thrombolysis.This option offers timely equality of access to these necessary specialist stroke services more evenly distributed across NI to include the rural population - ignored in the consultation. NI Stroke Consultation 2019: Presenting an additional Option to include all the excluded populations of Northern Ireland.

The NI Stroke Consultation: Reshaping Stroke Care – Saving Lives, Reducing Disability 2019 asks for the public’s agreement to choose an option between 6 possible options of future configuration of both hyperacute and acute stroke units in Northern Ireland (NI) even though many local Government Districts are excluded.

In these proposals, two existing stroke units in acute hospitals at Daisy Hill Hospital in Newry City and Causeway Hospital in Coleraine have been completely EXCLUDED from ALL possible Options to choose in the Consultation Questionnaire, and isolated from the process completely.

ALTNAGELVIN, CRAIGAVON AND ROYAL VICTORIA HOSPITALS SELECTED IN ALL OPTIONS

Altnagelvin, Craigavon and Royal Victoria Hospitals are proposed in every one of the 6 Options, which means the future of these three stroke units is perceived as definitely secure whatever happens.

These three stroke units may be recruiting on the strength of this, while other units and their staff are left out in the cold, despite actively participating in the Pre-Stroke Consultation in 2017, where they were assured that no decisions had been made.

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

RESEARCH BIAS

The approach in the Questionnaire is considered bad practice in Research as the occurrence of the same 3 hospitals in all 6 Options shows bias and favouritism and employment unions may be alerted that this is a failure to follow due process in Employment Law.

This bias renders the whole Consultation invalid as the topic deals with the Change and Withdrawal of existing public services in hospitals, which are paid for using Public Money.

TIMING OF CONSULTATION

The timing of this Consultation is also called into question as it was timed at the same time as the recess for forthcoming Council Elections. This leaves populations without access to advice from full sitting Councils and Council reps on local Health Boards. Therefore the Consultation must be extended beyond the statutory 3 months consultation period to allow Newry, Mourne and Down Council Representatives and other Councils in other areas to make a response on behalf of their electorate.

NEWRY, MOURNE & DOWN COUNCIL – NEEDS A HYPER ACUTE STROKE UNIT & AN ACUTE STROKE UNIT IN DAISY HILL HOSPITAL, NEWRY

>Newry Mourne and Down Council – has the 3rd highest council population in NI of  179,000 people (of which 105,300 residents live in rural areas ). If any of the Six pre-selected Options in the Consultation are chosen – this entire local government district will be left with NO Hyperacute or acute stroke /Rehabilitation Units and no timely access to Thrombolysis.

This deliberate plan to remove without a trace the existing designated Daisy Hill Acute Hospital combined Specialist Acute + Rehabilitation Stroke Unit is deplorable, and a public health injustice which cannot be condoned. (Stroke services are assured in Derry City and Strabane Council with a population of 150,500 with only 49,900 people living in a rural area.)

OPPORTUNITY & HOPE

Despite all these issues – there is STILL an opportunity for our excluded populations to put the best case forward for their existing Stroke Units. The only positive aspect of the Reshaping Stroke Consultation 2019 is that we have been given the opportunity to answer Q.6 with additional options

PRESENTING A NEW OPTION TO INCLUDE ALL N.I.

The answer as shown in the graphic is suggested for public consideration. In the Consultation Questionnaire Q. 6 asks: “Are there additional options that we have not considered?”

Q6 SUGGESTED ANSWER : 5 Hyperacute Stroke Units (HASUs) and 5 Acute Stroke Units (ASUs) at 5 acute hospitals in NI at: (1)Royal Victoria, Belfast; (2) Daisy Hill Hospital, Newry; (3) South West, Enniskillen; (4) Altnagelvin, Derry and (5) Causeway Hospital, Coleraine.

This option is based on existing acute stroke units that already give specialist CT scanning and Thrombolysis. This option offers timely equality of access to these necessary specialist stroke services more evenly distributed across NI and to include the rural population – ignored in the consultation.

In this option Antrim, Craigavon (a satellite town of Belfast) and Ulster Hospital, Dundonald – are all within 30 minutes motorway journey of Belfast and can advantageously avail of both Thrombolysis + Thrombectomy in the Royal Victoria Regional Hospital (already confirmed as having a HASU and an ASU).

Daisy Hill Acute Hospital (DHH) Newry City is in a strategic location where patients from Banbridge (approx 15mins travel from Newry City) and South Armagh and Down can avail of timely access to specialist stroke services (scanning and Thrombolysis ) in Daisy Hill (DHH) Hyperacute Stroke Unit + Rehabilitation in DHH Acute Stroke unit.

CONCLUSION YOUR LAST CHANCE to air your views in support of Daisy Hill specialist stroke unit.

The most meaningful way we can put the best case forward for the existing Daisy Hill combined Specialist Acute Stroke/ Rehabilitation unit and its dedicated staff in the Reshaping Stroke Consultation is by taking our time to respond to the questionnaire (including answering Q6).

Don’t give any rushed answers – the closing date is not until June 2019, and you can only submit one response each.

It should also be noted that the Complete Online Form’ button, and online form is set up to force people to choose one of those six options – which all mean the end for the stroke units in Daisy Hill Hospital and in Causeway Hospital. 

WE CAN and have the right to CHALLENGE these decisions and the options given and put the best case forward for RETENTION and ENHANCEMENT of Daisy Hill existing acute stroke rehab unit and its specialist services to ensure its rightful place in the network of stroke services in NI for the LONG TERM FUTURE.

More posts relating to the Stroke Consultation coming here soon and on: https://en-gb.facebook.com/daisyhillforlife/

The united community of Newry and Mourne and South Armagh will work together to ENHANCE stroke services in Daisy Hill Acute Hospital

© Daisy Hill for Life on Facebook and http://www.savedaisyhillhospital.com, 2015 – 2021. We welcome sharing of excerpts & links, provided that full and clear credit is given to http://www.savedaisyhillhospital.com and Daisy Hill for Life with appropriate and specific direction to the original content. Thank-you!

 

NI Stroke Services Consultation 2019 launch

The Reshaping Stroke Care Consultation was launched on 26th March 2019 by the Permanent Secretary for Health in Northern Ireland. The Consultation documents reveal what Stroke Services are proposed for The Newry & Mourne/South Armagh Area Hospital – Daisy Hill and for the rest of Northern Ireland.

HyperAcute Stroke Unit for Daisy Hill -Newry and Mourne/South Armagh Area Hospital Reshaping Stroke Care Consultation 2019

This Consultation is the follow up to the Reshaping Stroke Services pre-Consultation which closed in September 2017 and which readers of this site were encouraged to participate in. https://savedaisyhillhospital.com/reshaping-stroke-services-2017/

It is vitally important for the Northern Ireland population that acute Stroke Services are accessible in the Newry & Mourne/South Armagh area at Daisy Hill, Newry to ‘save lives’ of the current population and those of future generations.

The renamed ‘Reshaping Stroke Care – Saving Lives, Reducing Disability’ Consultation and associated docs are available to view and download from the Department of Health NI website:
https://www.health-ni.gov.uk/rehaping-stroke-care

Act FAST Stroke - HyperAcute Stroke Unit for Newry 2019
Every minute matters during a stroke.’ London Stroke Strategy

For more updated info on this Consultation, please see NI Stroke Consultation 2019 – Overview via this link: https://savedaisyhillhospital.com/2019/05/05/ni-stroke-consultation-2019-overview/

You can follow the Daisy Hill Acute Hospital campaign also by visiting and liking our Facebook page at https://www.facebook.com/daisyhillforlife/ – Thank you.

© Daisy Hill for Life on Facebook and http://www.savedaisyhillhospital.com, 2015 – 2019. We welcome sharing of excerpts & links, provided that full and clear credit is given to http://www.savedaisyhillhospital.com and Daisy Hill for Life with appropriate and specific direction to the original content. Thank-you!

 

2 NEW CT SCANNERS required NOW for Daisy Hill Acute Hospital ED

2 CT Scanners for Daisy Hill Hospital Newry city now

The Southern Trust needs to act at once to provide 2 CT Scanners as part of the VITAL diagnostic imaging services in Daisy Hill Acute Hospital, Newry city to meet their statutory duty of care and honour the promises they made in official statements (during the 2014 Stroke Consultation).

It is imperative that a NEW permanent replacement CT scanner and a second NEW CT scanner get Commissioner Approval and are installed AT ONCE in Daisy Hill Acute Hospital to give access to life saving DIAGNOSTIC treatment to save the lives of stroke and heart patients and for other medical emergencies.

IMAGING REVIEW

The Imaging Review Consultation stated the need FOR TWO CT scanners in 24/7 Emergency Departments to ensure resilience when one scanner breaks down so that another one is readily available – when patients URGENTLY need a CT scan.

Every second counts in getting a CT scan to save patients lives and give better outcomes for stroke and heart and other critical medical conditions.

CT SCANNING NEEDED TO CONFIRM TYPE OF STROKE – whether bleed or clot.

computer-tomography-image - CT scanner for Daisy Hill Hospital 2018

 

Major research into the Stroke pathway confirms the importance of diagnostic CT scanning to eliminate brain bleed for suitability for thrombolysis.

The Southern Trust needs to use the same urgent priority planning to address the needs for provision of imaging services for the Newry & Mourne population (the largest locality population in the Southern Trust), as well as addressing the needs of the Craigavon population, which has only the second largest Locality population in the Southern Trust.

In Craigavon, as the Trust Delivery Plan shows, advanced plans are already in place, with Commissioner Approval, for 2 NEW CT scanners, a new twin CT screening room and 1 more NEW MRI scanner. (Two NEW MRI scanners were already installed in Craigavon Hospital in 2014 and 2015).

REFRESH SOUTHERN TRUST IMAGING PLANS

The promises made in a series of official statements, three of which are detailed below, cannot be honoured by the Southern Trust without the provision of continuous CT scanning facilities in Daisy Hill ED, Newry City.

These promises can only be kept if the Southern Trust plan well in advance for replacement CT scanners so that the 7 year Royal College of Radiologists (RCR) recommended replacement timescale for functional life of a CT scanner is adhered to in Daisy Hill, in the same urgent manner as imaging services are planned for in Craigavon Hospital.

The Southern Trust’s IMAGING Plans must be refreshed to change the designated “non priority” for replacement of Daisy Hill’s existing CT scanner to “CAPITAL PRIORITY” and for a second new CT Scanner also as a “Capital Priority.”

The following promises were made by Southern Trust Personnel in Documents as listed below:

>STATEMENT 1:

‘STROKE CARE PROMISE’ (Newry Reporter: 27/08/2014)

“Emergency Treatment (for Stroke) will always be around the clock. If a clot busting drug is required, ….we aim to deliver a door to needle time of 60 minutes INCLUDING A CT SCAN PROVIDED AT BOTH HOSPITALS.”

(Southern Trust Director of Acute Services, Newry Reporter: 27 Aug 2014, Front page p 1, p 4)

>STATEMENT 2:

“Patients who have suffered a stroke will always get IMMEDIATE DIAGNOSIS and emergency treatment, including thrombolysis AT BOTH of our Emergency Departments in Daisy Hill Hospital and Craigavon Area Hospital. This will ensure we can continue to achieve a ‘door to needle’ time of 60 minutes for thrombolysis.”

(Southern Trust Stroke Consultation Document, p.14, June 2014)

>STATEMENT 3:

“People with symptoms of stroke are always taken first to the Emergency Department in either Daisy Hill Hospital or Craigavon Area Hospital for ASSESSMENT and treatment and our proposals would NOT change this”.

(Chief Executive of the Southern Health Trust, Launch of the Stroke Consultation, Southern Trust Press release 19/06/2014.)

CALL FOR ACTION FROM SOUTHERN TRUST NOW

A NEW permanent replacement CT scanner and a second NEW CT scanner must now be a CAPITAL PRIORITY, get Commissioner Approval, and be installed immediately in Daisy Hill Acute Hospital to give access to life saving DIAGNOSTIC treatment to save the lives of stroke and heart patients and for other medical emergencies.

Investment in CT and MRI scanners essential for Daisy Hill Acute Hospital, Newry City.

You can visit – follow and  like our Facebook page at https://www.facebook.com/daisyhillforlife/ – Thank you.

© Daisy Hill for Life on Facebook and http://www.savedaisyhillhospital.com, 2015 – 2017. We welcome sharing of excerpts & links, provided that full and clear credit is given to http://www.savedaisyhillhospital.com and Daisy Hill for Life with appropriate and specific direction to the original content. Thank-you!

 

CAPITAL PRIORITIES FOR HOSPITAL CT and MRI SCANNERS IN DAISY HILL AND CRAIGAVON HOSPITALS OUTLINED

Hospital scanner

The urgent need for MRI and CT scanning equipment in Daisy Hill Acute Hospital, Newry for now and the future, was pointed out by many people in responses to the Draft Consultation called ‘Strategic Framework for Imaging Services in Health and Social Care’, (which closed in January 2018.)

The Department of Health NI has published the Final Framework and Summary of Responses documents on their website. (Links are available below)

WAITING LISTS GROW IN THE SOUTHERN TRUST

 

As demand for diagnostic MRI and CT scans in the Southern Trust area increases, this need for more imaging equipment becomes more urgent.

Of the 5 Health Trusts in Northern Ireland – the Southern Trust had the HIGHEST number of people (26,383) on the URGENT Waiting list in need of CT diagnostic scanning, out of 34,137 people waiting for CT scans in the Southern Trust. (for the period 31st July 2017 – 30th June 2018).

The Southern Trust also had the 2nd highest number of people in NI on the URGENT waiting list for diagnostic MRI scans during the same period (9,419 people).

Providing extra CT and MRI scanners in Daisy Hill Acute Hospital, Newry – in the largest locality in the Southern Trust would improve these waiting lists.

However there is NO CAPITAL INVESTMENT PROPOSED as a PRIORITY for the replacement of the eight year old CT Scanner, or new MRI and CT scanners in DAISY HILL ACUTE HOSPITAL (for 2014 to 2022).

Source: Imaging Review Equipment Management Document, see pg 31/32 table extract shown below *

 

Extracts from this document show plans for proposed CT/MRI Scanning Equipment Investment (2014 – 2022) and the level of priority the Trust assigns it.

New/Replacement equipment is NOT a TRUST PRIORITY for DAISY HILL Acute Hospital, Newry City.

Trust Priority         EQUIPMENT                 £ Est. Cost

NOT A PRIORITY;  MRI SCANNER Daisy Hill  £500k  for 2016/17

NOT A PRIORITY;  CT SCANNER Daisy Hill    £500k  for 2016/17


In the same period, the Trust assigns Priority 1, 2, 3 (2014 – 2022) for CT/MRI equipment for CRAIGAVON Hospital at a TOTAL COST of nearly £4.5 MILLION

Trust Priority         EQUIPMENT                £ Est. Cost

PRIORITY 1;          2ND NEW CT Scanner    £2 million       for 2015 /16
PRIORITY 2;          2ND MRI Scanner          £1.5 million    for 2014/15
PRIORITY 3;          UPGRADE CT Scanner    £495K            for  2015/16
PRIORITY 3;          UPGRADE CT Scanner    £500K            for 2021/22

Trust priority 1, 2, 3 (2014 – 2022) for CRAIGAVON > TOTAL COST nearly £4.5 MILLION

(Source: Imaging Review Equipment Management Document, see pg 31/32 table)

Investment in CT and MRI scanners essential for Daisy Hill Acute Hospital, Newry City, in the largest locality in the southern Trust area.

£62.8 MILLION PROPOSED INVESTMENT FUNDING 2014/15 – 2022 FOR IMAGING EQUIPMENT IN NI

Under the ‘Proposed Major Equipment Investment Programme’ (see Annex D Equipment Management Document) – all five Health Trusts in NI have asked for a total of £62.8 million from the Department of Health for New and Replacement of major imaging equipment (from 2014/15 to 2022) under Royal College of Radiologists guidelines.

The Trust have asked for nearly £4.5 million of this proposed Investment as a Trust Priority for CT and MRI scanning equipment for Craigavon only between 2014 to 2022.

One proposed new CT scanner in Craigavon Hospital for 2015/16 (Trust Priority 1) was itemised to cost £2million, this is enough money to pay for one Necessary MRI scanner as well as 1 Vital CT scanner in Daisy Hill Acute Hospital, Newry City.

Daisy Hill Hospital is not even down as a Trust Priority to get a REPLACEMENT CT scanner (to replace the CT scanner which was installed in 2010) even though the Royal College of Radiologist guidelines should be adhered to.

DEMOGRAPHICS (population)

Using the latest population estimates (June 2017), Newry & Mourne Locality has the largest Local population (105,161) of the five former Local Government Districts of Newry & Mourne, Banbridge, Dungannon, Armagh and Craigavon in the operational area of the Southern Trust.

Daisy Hill Acute Hospital, Newry city should currently have at least TWO NEW diagnostic MRI and 2 NEW CT scanners, plus a NEW MOBILE SCANNER and NEW SCREENING ROOMS, as in Craigavon Local Government District (which always had a smaller Local Government District or Locality population.)

Do you agree? If so, please continue to speak up for Daisy Hill. Continued support from the Community, Politicians, Individuals, Trade Unions and businesses on this issue is URGENTLY NEEDED NOW.

Daisy Hill Acute Hospital for Life, Daisy Hill acute hospital, Newry city.

BACKGROUND INFO & LINKS

Links to the Strategic Framework for Imaging Services in Health and Social Care Consultation documents referred to in this article are below:

*Link to Imaging Review Equipment Management doc –  https://www.health-ni.gov.uk/sites/default/files/consultations/health/Imaging%20Review%20%20Equipment%20Management%20pdf.pdf  (See pages 31 -32 for Southern Trust planned Investment including Daisy Hill Hospital)

https://www.health-ni.gov.uk/sites/default/files/publications/health/IR-responses.pdf

https://www.health-ni.gov.uk/publications/strategic-framework-imaging-services-health-and-social-care

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A Clear vision for Daisy Hill Acute Hospital - Newry _Daisy Hill for Life

Daisy Hill Acute Hospital, Newry City