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Major Kent healthcare shake-up faces delays

Health chiefs have warned that it could be some time before consultation on a wide-ranging shake-up of services in east Kent can get underway.

They say that while they have made some progress in evaluating two options for east Kent, NHS England recently introduced stricter rules on any re-organisation of health care which has meant “further work is required to progress...options...and meet the requirements of the NHS England guidance.”

A briefing note due to be discussed at a meeting of the Kent and Medway health overview committee tomorrow says the additional work needed to meet the new rules is “having an impact on our timelines to deliver a business case and proposals which we can take to formal public consultation.”

Major healthcare shake-up faces delays
Major healthcare shake-up faces delays

Because of this, management consultants have been contracted “to complete an independent assessment of the work to date to transform services and to prepare the business case.”

The briefing paper adds that while there are factors “within our control” others are not - notably that it is dependant on NHS England to endorse the business case.

Two options are being considered but both are complex in terms of funding and will require significant investment.

One option involves the creation of a major emergency centre with specialist services at the William Harvey in Ashford; an emergency centre at the Queen Elizabeth Queen Mother in Margate and a GP-led urgent care centre at the Kent and Canterbury.

The second is the creation of a major emergency centre at the Kent and Canterbury and GP-led urgent care centres at the other two hospitals.

A developer has offered to meet the costs of a new hospital “shell” at Canterbury in return for land on which to build houses.

The east Kent clinical commissioning groups who are leading the reorganisation say no date has yet been set for consultation.

A statement issued on behalf of the CCGs said: “Once we have a shortlist of established proposals to go to public consultation, there will be a rigorous assurance process before the consultation launches.

"It is a process that requires a great deal of hard work and, while it is being progressed as quickly as possible, it is not possible currently to give a date for when consultation will start.”

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