Hospital Services (South Manchester) Debate
Full Debate: Read Full DebateKate Green
Main Page: Kate Green (Labour - Stretford and Urmston)Department Debates - View all Kate Green's debates with the Department of Health and Social Care
(9 years, 2 months ago)
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I congratulate the hon. Member for Wythenshawe and Sale East (Mike Kane) on securing this debate. It is a pleasure to be working alongside him, the hon. Member for Stretford and Urmston (Kate Green) and other concerned Members from Greater Manchester, who are deeply worried and troubled by the proposals being put forward in Healthier Together as a whole and for Wythenshawe hospital, the university hospital of south Manchester, in particular.
It gives none of us any pleasure to be here and to have to raise this debate, any more than it gives the consultants at Wythenshawe hospital any pleasure or satisfaction to have been pushed to the point where they felt that the only way to make their voices heard and ensure that their fears about patient safety in the longer term did not come to pass was to pursue the initial stages of judicial review. I could not agree more with the hon. Member for Wythenshawe and Sale East that that is not the way that any of us would wish to have this question resolved.
As the hon. Gentleman said, throughout the Healthier Together process, colleagues on both sides of the House have warned that the process was deeply flawed. The consultation undertaken over a three-year period is the worst instance of public consultation that I have encountered in my 18 years in this place. It moved immediately from discussion of warm platitudes about improved collaboration, and the better results that that can achieve, to a table of possible outcomes that was so complicated that no member of the public could hope to understand the implications. The whole episode raises some profoundly serious questions, both about the delivery of the best possible health services in Greater Manchester and about accountability in the delivery of public services and the ways we can ensure that the public view is properly heard and respected.
As the hon. Gentleman—my colleague—said, in Greater Manchester we are poised to embark on some very exciting changes, which, if got right, will make dramatic improvements in our delivery of health and social care and could provide not just a great improvement for our constituents but a model for many other parts of the country to follow. If instead we see this sort of flawed decision-making process proceed, the danger is that people will see devolving power and decision making to a more local level not as something that will empower them and give them a stronger voice but as something that will result in less accountability and is less likely to deliver for local communities. We need to ensure that the Government understand and the Department recognises that there would be a significant cost if this episode were allowed to damage wider public trust. All of us want more devolved decision making in Greater Manchester, but we want it done right, not in the deeply flawed way presaged by this process.
Not only was the consultation flawed—it appeared to be designed to obfuscate and confuse members of the public, rather than to be a genuine exercise in seeking public opinion—but the decision-making process at its conclusion was pursued in a way that is clearly unreasonable. I concur with the hon. Member for Wythenshawe and Sale East that, given the unreasonable nature of the process from beginning to end, there is every likelihood that, should judicial review be pursued to its conclusion, it will be successful. That is an important reason why we need people throughout the process—whether power now lies with the Department of Health or with the commissioning bodies—to get a grip on this problem and to try to bring it to a more satisfactory conclusion.
I do not want to go into enormous detail about the decision-making process—the hon. Gentleman has given a good survey of the technical questions that Healthier Together raises for UHSM—but we have seen clear support among the members of the public who responded to the consultation for Wythenshawe to be the fourth specialist hospital. Of course, the weight of responses cannot always be the factor that leads to a decision, but it is incumbent on those involved in any decision-making process to take public views seriously. If those views are to be discounted, that should be only on the most serious grounds and on the basis of clearly reasoned arguments.
I have two principal concerns about the grounds on which the weight of opinion was disregarded. First, there is the deeply spurious decision not to take account of the current standard of care delivered at Wythenshawe hospital. Any lay person and—I venture to suggest, having had many conversations with senior clinicians—any senior clinician would regard it as patently absurd to discount the hospital’s current clinical standards on the grounds that all the other hospitals are expected to reach the same standard at some point in the future so the standard is of no consequence. It is Orwellian to run policy and decision making in that way. I hope that the Minister will accept that that should give serious pause and serious cause for concern.
The second significant point, which the hon. Gentleman also raised, relates to the decision finally being grounded on the travel time for a relatively small population in High Peak—I am not saying this because my hon. Friend the Member for High Peak (Andrew Bingham) has had to leave the Chamber to go to a Committee. The failure properly to take account of the A6 relief road, which is now being built, and which will deliver flows of patients from High Peak to Wythenshawe in a much shorter time, is again, frankly preposterous.
I am sorry to make this point in the absence of the hon. Member for High Peak (Andrew Bingham), because I am sure that he would want to say something about it. However, is it not also the case that, in looking at the travel time, the failure to consider other options for High Peak patients, outside the Greater Manchester conurbation, also calls the decision into question?
Yes, absolutely; that is an important point. Without venturing too far into the realms of legal opinion and the judicial review that we could face, what makes the decision so demonstrably unreasonable is the failure to take account of a known factor that will materially change the travel times on which that decision is purported to have been based.
Furthermore, it is questionable policy to proceed with such profound changes to services at the same time as another review was going on. It may be sensible to proceed with some of the shared service propositions for UHSM and Central Manchester—that may be the way forward and may lead to better outcomes for patients in both trusts, and it should certainly be explored—but seeking to arrive at agreement on that while the Healthier Together process was still to conclude was deeply questionable and is a source of serious concern for us all.
I will not rehearse the long list of outstanding tertiary services offered by Wythenshawe not only to Greater Manchester, north Cheshire and north Wales but far beyond. We are debating hospital services in south Manchester, but as the hon. Gentleman reminded us, we are also talking about a hospital that provides the most complex tertiary services for a much wider area. Clearly, therefore, the issue is more significant, and it is more important to get it right, than would be the case were the hospital providing important tertiary services merely for a local population.
The consultants who have spoken to me—I am sure that they have also spoken to my friends on the Opposition Benches—have been very clear. There is no question that they are trying to defend their own patch or their own empire; some are constituents whom I have known for many years, and many of them are at a point in their careers when they really do not need to be concerned about those things. Some are very eminent in their fields, and when they tell me that their concerns are purely about patient safety—they say that they are entirely open to sensible proposals for reorganisation, shared service agreements and so on, but that they are worried that the work being done at UHSM could be threatened and could, in the hon. Gentleman’s words, suffer death by a thousand cuts—I am inclined to take those concerns seriously.
To boil the consultants’ concerns down to the simplest level, their analysis is that the high level of complex tertiary services at Wythenshawe can continue into the long term only if it benefits from an equally high level of general surgical support to ensure that different, co-dependent services and procedures can always be provided in the safest way. The hon. Gentleman said very clearly and correctly that, in the consultants’ view, the provision of general surgery would remain at an appropriate level only if Wythenshawe remained a receiving centre for complex general surgery. If the same level of support is not present—we have all seen how this works—it will be only a matter of time before we find ourselves here again, with a new review suggesting that it really is not safe to perform heart and lung transplants at Wythenshawe, because it lacks the necessary general surgical support when complications arise.
The consultants make a powerful and plausible case. First, there is the procedural case that Healthier Together has been flawed and that the process and decision were unreasonable. I also find it compelling when they say that having a certain level of general surgical support is the only way to protect the complex services that are provided at the moment.
I am grateful to my hon. Friend the Member for Wythenshawe and Sale East (Mike Kane) for securing the debate. As you have heard, Mr Hollobone, the three Trafford MPs have been working closely together, and with clinical staff at the hospital at Wythenshawe, on our concerns about patient safety, which I want to highlight. Many of my constituents use Wythenshawe hospital as their local hospital, especially following the downgrading of services at Trafford general hospital two or three years ago as a result of the new health deal for Trafford. Indeed, when NHS managers were making the case for that, their argument was that Trafford residents would receive better, more expert care at Wythenshawe. To be told now that services in that hospital may also be downgraded will at least cause a further collapse in public confidence in the processes by which decisions about health service configuration are taken.
My constituents also rely on UHSM’s specialist services, about which we have heard much this morning. They are full of praise for the care that they receive. My hon. Friend the Member for Wythenshawe and Sale East spoke in detail about some of those specialties and I have had the great privilege of visiting some of the specialist teams at Wythenshawe and meeting staff. All are adamant that their success—and they are very successful and in many cases world-class teams—is due to their strong team-based approach and their reliance on the support of a full range of hospital services. Removing or downgrading any so-called ancillary services will have a direct effect on the specialties. It is for that reason that consultants at Wythenshawe have told us that they do not have confidence in the Healthier Together model and that in their view the specialties at Wythenshawe cannot continue to be operated safely under it.
The interdependencies across the disciplines are wide-ranging, but, as we have heard this morning from both my hon. Friend the Member for Wythenshawe and Sale East and the hon. Member for Altrincham and Sale West (Mr Brady), the clinicians we have spoken to are clear that remaining a receiving centre for acute emergency surgery is at the heart of their ability to maintain the holistic care that is needed to ensure patient safety and specialties at UHSM. That is also borne out, for example, by some of the NHS’s national standards. The standard for thoracic organ transplants states the need for general surgical in-house support seven days a week. As we have heard, Wythenshawe is a—if not the—leading centre for transplant surgery in the north part of the country.
I recognise that the numbers of such highly complex specialist cases are small and that the vast majority of procedures and services currently provided at Wythenshawe could continue under the Healthier Together model. I am also happy to acknowledge the work that has been done by NHS managers in the Healthier Together team and acute trust and the commissioners, to look at ways in which the design can protect the expertise and specialism that we value. First, trying to manipulate the process to make a fundamentally unsafe model work is not the right way to proceed. Colleagues are right to say as they have this morning that we need to draw back and ensure that the model itself is correct, rather than trying to ameliorate some of its more dangerous elements. Secondly, it is not just a question of numbers and whether another half a consultant will resolve the problem. It is also about the ability to continue to attract, recruit, retain and develop the full range of professional skills; and about building and sustaining the strong multi-disciplinary teams that the consultants tell us are necessary. It is also, as we heard from my hon. Friend the Member for Wythenshawe and Sale East, about the ability to offer the rotations and varied experience that enable UHSM to function as a full teaching hospital.
Of course we all accept that the ambition of Healthier Together to raise standards across Greater Manchester is the right one. It is unacceptable that outcomes are so poor in Greater Manchester and so patchy across different hospitals and acute trusts, but the answer to that cannot be to put at risk one of the best performing hospitals in the conurbation—indeed, in the country—and its highly successful outcomes in the hope that other hospitals will, in time, rise to meet those outcomes. It is absolutely right that we want to see outcomes improved at all our hospitals in Greater Manchester, and very much so in the case of Stockport. I understand, however, that there is not even yet a guarantee that the resources will be available to enable the improvements at those other hospitals to bring them up to the standards currently achieved at Wythenshawe and, at the same time, we risk a deterioration in the outcomes that we enjoy at UHSM.
I am also concerned that the risk to safety could be exacerbated by the proposed governance arrangements. As things stand, UHSM and Central Manchester Foundation Trust—the two trusts that will be working together to deliver some of the services that are currently available at Wythenshawe—will each retain their own governing bodies. As we have heard this morning, some shared services have been agreed by the two trusts, for which I understand there will be a shared services board and a shared clinical standards board. For the rest, however, the model proposed for CMFT and UHSM will, effectively, create the largest single combined acute trust in the country, while retaining two separate governing bodies, creating potential for confusion, inconsistency and a blurring of accountability.
In my view, there are really serious and genuine questions about patient safety inherent in the Healthier Together model, and we all have an obligation to address those. As we have heard, the consultants are seeking to expose the risks, possibly via a judicial review, but given the nature of their concerns and the delays that a judicial review process would cause to getting the right health configuration for Greater Manchester, I believe we need to make sure that the process we follow now to reach the right decision is a health-led—clinically led—review of the issues.
When the Secretary of State kindly met my hon. Friend the Member for Wythenshawe and Sale East, the hon. Member for Altrincham and Sale West and me prior to the summer recess, we understood him clearly to say—and we appreciated this—that he would be prepared to intervene if safety were an issue. As we have heard this morning, the various concerns that have been expressed include safety concerns, and I hope that the Minister will say today how the Department intends to satisfy itself that those are being properly addressed.
One route might be—although this, too, would increase the risk of delay—to consider a referral to the independent reconfiguration panel. That would ensure a clinically led approach to the review of the decision, and we are familiar with that route in Trafford, given that it was followed as part of discussions on the new health deal for Trafford. Has the Department looked at that model, or will it? If that is not an appropriate route, will the Minister indicate other ways in which he can encourage a collaborative, clinically led pause and proper analysis of the situation within Greater Manchester, as the hon. Member for Altrincham and Sale West suggested?
None of the three MPs in Trafford wants to delay the changes that we desperately need in Greater Manchester to improve patient outcomes, but if the Minister is not able to give us assurances on behalf of the Department, I am quite sure that the legal action that the consultants are reluctantly considering will proceed. They will feel that they have no alternative, in the interests of their patients, but to ensure that this decision is properly challenged and exposed. I have to say, too, that given the concerns about patient safety that they, as clinicians, are highlighting to us as politicians, I will feel obliged, in the interests of my constituents, to support them.
None of us wants to go down that route this morning. We hope that the Minister will be able to give us practical but reassuring commitments about a better way to resolve these very serious concerns, which, as we have heard, not only affect our constituents directly, but will be far-reaching, both immediately, in terms of the wider care that is provided at UHSM to patients well beyond the Greater Manchester conurbation, and in the long term to the credibility of the approach that is being taken in Greater Manchester and our ability to operate devolved healthcare effectively, as we all want.
First, I thank and congratulate the hon. Member for Wythenshawe and Sale East (Mike Kane) on bringing this debate to the House. It is a particular pleasure to be answering him. His predecessor became something of a friend, and I know that he had a similar admiration for him and certainly a far closer friendship with him, so I feel honoured now to be answering, as one of my first clutch of Westminster Hall debates, a debate brought here by him.
As is so often the case with Westminster Hall debates, it is frustrating that the debate will not be more widely seen and understood by members of the public, because they would see Members of Parliament fighting hard for their constituents and constituencies, and speaking with great eloquence and detailed knowledge and understanding of complicated things. Those things are not necessarily within their professional expertise, but they have done the research and acquired the knowledge to be able to speak about them. And, most important, Members are speaking on a cross-party basis. If more people were to see that, they would see the value that they were getting from their representatives. I value very much the passion and the detail that the hon. Member for Wythenshawe and Sale East has brought to the debate, as I do that of other hon. Members who have spoken and the measured response that the shadow Minister, the hon. Member for Copeland (Mr Reed), has given.
I should say at the outset that I am rather more restrained from giving an expansive answer to the hon. Member for Wythenshawe and Sale East than I would normally be, because a letter before action has been issued and, although the Department of Health is not a party to any legal action, I would not like to prejudice something that did come about. I hope that the hon. Gentleman will not mind if I comment on those areas on which I can comment and then on the general principles that were raised. The hon. Member for Stretford and Urmston (Kate Green) specifically raised the general policy of reconfiguration. I can give her more detail about that and give, I hope, a narrative explanation of how I and the Department understand the process as it has gone on so far.
In the round, it is welcome that the hon. Gentleman and other hon. Members understand the importance of devolution. I agree completely with him that the turn of events in Manchester is of serious significance; it is of a generation-changing nature. It was good to hear my hon. Friend the Member for Altrincham and Sale West (Mr Brady) saying exactly the same thing. It is important that decisions that are taken at any stage by devolved administrations, whether they be clinical commissioning groups, local councils or health and wellbeing boards—or indeed the overview and scrutiny committees in the way they look at these decisions—inspire confidence in devolved decision making, rather than acting against it. Of course, reconfiguration and change normally cause some disruption and disquiet in areas not chosen as sites for new or increased activities. He spoke powerfully of the need for devolved powers, but I hope that he accepts that it is in the nature of such decisions that people will sometimes be disappointed.
I understand entirely why Wythenshawe, with the extraordinary range of specialisms, both secondary and tertiary, which the hon. Member for Wythenshawe and Sale East pointed to, and with a history famous not only in the north-west but across the country, should feel aggrieved that it was not one of the four centres chosen to be part of Healthier Together. It would be unusual if the world-respected clinicians and management at the hospital did not fight their corner, and it is appropriate that he should represent their concerns. I agree with everyone who has said that it would be extremely sad for the matter to go to judicial review. We certainly do not want that to come to pass, either in this consultation or elsewhere.
Before I talk in general about consultations, I want to bring the hon. Gentleman up to date on events in the past couple of days. I understand that there have been some constructive conversations between commissioners and clinicians at the hospital, and that discussions will continue about the relationship between tertiary specialties and the general surgery that, it is proposed, will be moved to one of the four sites. A conversation has begun and is continuing, so there is a glimmer of hope that the parties involved will not go to the courts on this matter, which is so important for patient safety and healthcare in Manchester.
I want to speak about the nature of consultations, and to respond to the shadow Minister’s entirely correct points about how a consultation should be conducted. As a constituency Member of Parliament, I, too, have been through a number of health consultations. Some are good, and some are bad, but I hope that we are generally getting better at them. I remember several, under the previous Administration—this is not a party political point, but I think that the process is generally iterative within government—which were particularly poorly conducted. To their credit, the previous Administration reversed some of the decisions.
Some consultations are well run, however, and have the support of large numbers of people in the community. I can only report on the information that I have received, but I am impressed by the support from local councils, from clinicians, from the clinical senate, from doctors and from management across Manchester for the Healthier Together programme, and for the size and scope of the consultation. As the shadow Minister and Opposition Members know, a consultation is not a plebiscite, so we cannot take the raw number of responses in favour of any particular solution as a “correct” response. It is important that all consultation responses are taken into account, and I have been assiduous in trying to make sure that the Healthier Together team—the commissioners—have listened to all consultation responses. I have urged them to engage as profoundly as possible with Wythenshawe to show that the responses have been listened to with care.
At the core of the proposal is a noble ambition: to save in excess of 1,000 lives over a five-year period. If Manchester were to match the best mortality rates achieved elsewhere in the country, 300 lives a year would be saved, which is nearly a life a day. The decisions being taken are difficult, but they will produce a considerable dividend not only for hundreds of potential victims of currently substandard care but for their families, extended families and friends. The prize is considerable, and it is worth striving after.
I agree with the shadow Minister that consultations need to demonstrate wide public engagement. I am impressed by the number of people involved in this consultation, which received some 29,000 written responses. There has been 18 months of consultation, and 23,500 people were involved in this specific part of the consultation. There are conflicting answers to the question of how to reduce mortality in Manchester; that has been clear even from hon. Members’ contributions. To mangle St Augustine, we are almost saying, “Let us have service reconfiguration and service improvement, but not yet.”
I do not fully agree with the suggestion made by my hon. Friend the Member for Altrincham and Sale West that consultations and service changes should happen sequentially. It would be impossible to run anything as complex as the health service, or, indeed, anything in government, if one were to take that approach. We must in this instance, as elsewhere, rely on the clinical judgment of commissioners. That lies at the very heart of the changes that the Government have made—both in our coalition iteration and in this new Conservative Government—towards relying entirely on the clinical basis for service reconfiguration. I must, therefore, bow to the judgment of clinicians in this and other instances, and I know that most Members here will want to do the same.
Although the shadow Minister has said that the proposal comes within the global need to try to do more with less—I do not want to rehearse the arguments about healthcare spending—I think that everyone has agreed that, in this instance, finance does not play a part. The chairman of the Manchester local councils made that explicit in his response to the consultation. This is actually about doing more better. There will always be a trade-off between travel times and sites, and clinical excellence. We would all like to have, right next to our house, a hospital with the full suite of tertiary expertise, but as we all know, a high throughput of patients would be required to maintain the necessary skills within clinical teams. Clearly, that would not be possible, so there has to be a balance between the number of sites and the distance that people must travel to them. That is the balance that the consultation and the proposal have sought to strike. In the majority of Manchester, it is believed that they have struck that balance correctly.
The Minister spoke a moment ago about the decision being taken by clinical commissioning groups—by clinicians. The problem is that a different group of clinicians, namely the consultants at Wythenshawe hospital, are offering a different opinion about patient safety from that of the commissioners. As politicians, I believe that we must take account of the fact that safety is being flagged up by clinicians. How does the Department reconcile the difference of opinion about patient safety between commissioners and consultants?
The hon. Lady is right to say that there are concerns from some clinicians at Wythenshawe hospital, and we should listen to those. There is an established process by which those concerns should be brought to bear. If she does not mind me running through the detail of how reconfiguration policy works, I am sure that she will find answers to some of the questions in her speech.
Our first principle is that the service changes should be led by clinicians, which is the point of the process. In this instance, the service changes are being led by 12 clinical commissioning groups coming together to discuss the future of 10 hospitals. The service changes will affect just under 1% of in-patients, and just under 20% of patients receiving general surgery, at Wythenshawe hospital. Within the context of Wythenshawe hospital as a whole, we are talking about a very small number of patients. I appreciate the hon. Lady’s concerns about the interrelationship with other specialties, but let us keep it in mind that this is a small number of patients.
Once the commissioners have come to their decision, there are two ways of resolving complaints from one party or another. The first is by a recommendation from the joint overview and scrutiny committee to the Secretary of State for Health—such a recommendation has not been made in this case—or by a referral to the Independent Reconfiguration Panel, which the hon. Lady mentioned in her speech. The Independent Reconfiguration Panel has made a number of recommendations in the past. That is no predictor of future performance, but at no point in the past, under any Administration, has a Secretary of State gone against the Independent Reconfiguration Panel’s recommendations. The point of both those exercises is to retain clinical ownership of decisions, albeit by different clinicians from those who made the original decision. If we go back to the bad old days, when decisions were made for political purposes following a clinical recommendation, we would not listen to clinicians in the round and, therefore, would make decisions on the wrong basis, possibly putting lives in jeopardy.
The hon. Lady has raised clinicians’ concerns about the effect on tertiary services, which are impressive at Wythenshawe hospital. All I can say is that NHS England has undertaken a thorough clinically-led review of all tertiary services at the hospital and has concluded that the changes to general surgery for stomach and bowel accidents will not adversely impact on the tertiary specialties available at Wythenshawe hospital. That is the advice that the Department has received from clinicians at NHS England. I have described the other options open to parties in Manchester, and I reaffirm that, even if it might suit some Members present to take that decision-making process out of clinical hands at whatever level and to vest it in the Department, it is not a direction that anyone on either side of the House ultimately wishes to take. We must therefore trust the opinion of clinicians in the bodies that have made those decisions so far.