Healthcare in Essex
Healthcare in Essex is now the responsibility of six Clinical Commissioning Groups: Basildon and Brentwood, Mid Essex, North East Essex, Southend, Thurrock and West Essex.
Contents
History
From 1947 to 1965 NHS services in Essex were managed by the East Anglian (for Saffron Walden and North-East Metropolitan (the rest of the county) Regional Hospital Boards. In 1974 the Boards were abolished and replaced by Regional Health Authorities. Essex came under the North East Thames RHA. Regions were reorganised in 1996 and Essex came under the North Thames Regional Health Authority. There were two Area Health Authorities from 1974 until 1982: Barking and Havering and Essex. There were 6 District Authorities: Barking, Havering and Brentwood; Basildon and Thurrock; Mid Essex; North East Essex; Southend; and West Essex. in 1993 these were reorganised into North Essex and South Essex. Regional Health Authorities were reorganised and renamed Strategic Health Authorities in 2002. Essex was under the Essex SHA. In 2006 regions were again reorganised and Essex came under NHS East of England until that was abolished in 2013. There were six Primary Care Trusts for the area: South East Essex; South West Essex; North Essex; West Essex; North East Essex; and Mid-Essex PCT.
Suffolk and North East Essex formed a sustainability and transformation plan area in March 2016 with Nick Hulme, the Chief Executive of Ipswich Hospital NHS Trust, as its leader. Hertfordshire and West Essex formed an STP with Beverley Flowers, the Accountable Officer of East and North Hertfordshire Clinical Commissioning Group as its leader, and Mid and South Essex under the leadership of Dr Anita Donley the Independent Chair of the Mid and South Essex Success Regime. [1]
Commissioning
Service restrictions
In 2015 the spending allocation received by Mid-Essex Clinical Commissioning Group, was £81 less per head of population than the national average.[2]
In September a survey by the Health Service Journal showed that 34 of 188 CCGs who responded to their survey had restricted access to some services. Restrictions were usually introduced by a number of CCGs acting together across an area. Essex CCGs were proposing restricted access to specialist fertility services, and non-urgent elective surgery for patients who were obese or smoked.[3]
Basildon and Brentwood CCG decided to limit GP referrals for vasectomy in April 2015. The number of vasectomies each practice is permitted to refer in 2015/16 ranges from one to 11 per practice based on their list size. The decision was criticised by Dr Richard Vautrey of the British Medical Association who said: ‘This is a ridiculous short-term decision that could have huge long-term emotional and financial consequences to both families in the area that the CCG serves and to the wider NHS as other services have to pick up the pieces. For the sake of saving a few pounds the CCG is taking the risk of a rise in unwanted pregnancies and all that means for individuals and families and they should seriously consider reversing this decision.’[4]
North East Essex CCG decided in May 2015 to stop providing IVF, vasectomies or female sterilisation to people other than those with complex health needs, and to stop prescribing gluten-free food to most patients. People needing non-urgent elective surgery who smoke will be referred to stop-smoking services and overweight patients will be encouraged to lose weight before their operation and failure to attend the programmes “may have an impact on whether individuals could undergo their procedure”.[5] It also plan to stop most IVF treatment. These decisions are intended to save £14 million a year.[6]
Mid Essex CCG proposed to stop funding hearing aids for people with mild hearing loss, prescriptions for gluten-free food, vasectomies and female sterilisation and possibly all direct GP-assessed physiotherapy in December 2015.[7]
Data extraction
In June 2015 Southend CCG announced plans to start extracting data from GP records to identify patients with complex care needs though their NHS number, age and post code, with the aim of reviewing their care. It will be linked to hospital records including the number of appointments with the GP or practice nurse, prescribed medications, and unplanned admissions for individual patients. Patients will not be given the opportunity to opt out of this exercise. The CCG says ‘Quite often the reason an individual’s care is high cost is because they are receiving multiple services but all delivered separately. By reviewing data across the system we will be better placed to see opportunities to join up health and social care services and provide patients with a single package of care.’[8]
Primary care
There are 35 GP practices in Thurrock, 41 in Southend, 40 in West Essex, 43 in North East Essex, 49 in Mid Essex, 41 in Ipswich and East Suffolk and 44 in Basildon and Brentwood.
Out-of-hours services are provided by Nestor Primecare Services Limited in Mid Essex, Care UK in North East Essex and Southend, Partnership of East London Co-operatives (PELC) Limited in West Essex, South Essex Emergency Doctors Service in Thurrock and Basildon.
Acute care
Basildon and Thurrock University Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust, Colchester Hospital University NHS Foundation Trust, Southend University Hospital NHS Foundation Trust and Mid Essex Hospital Services NHS Trust provide acute services in the county. In May 2015 the acute hospitals in Essex were about together £150m in deficit, and there has been a series of recent lapses in patient safety at Broomfield Hospital. The county was one of three proposed for the new “success regime” by Simon Stevens in June 2015 in which NHS England will work in partnership with Monitor and the NHS Trust Development Authority to tackle in the local health economy.[9]
Clare Panniker, the Chief Executive at Basildon is leading the success regime initiative, which aims to tackle a deficit in Mid and south Essex of £216 million by 2018-19. Services are to be reconfigured at Basildon and Thurrock University Hospitals, Southend University Hospital, and Mid Essex Hospital. There have been promises that none of the hospitals will close, but they will be managed together.[10]
Mental health
North Essex Partnership University NHS Foundation Trust and South Essex Partnership University NHS Foundation Trust
Community services
Palliative care is provided by Farleigh Hospice, St Helena Hospice in Colchester, St Luke's Hospice in Basildon, The J's Hospice in Great Baddow, St Clare Hospice in Hastingwood, and Fair Havens Hospice, Westcliff-on-Sea which also runs Little Havens Hospice in Thundersley.
HealthWatch
Healthwatch is an organisation set up under the Health and Social Care Act 2012 to act as a voice for patients.
See also
References
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