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GMB attend public meeting to keep St Helier and Epsom hospitals open

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GMB Southern to join public meeting in Sutton on Thursday 19th April on keeping St Helier and Epsom hospitals open. “Kidding themselves and hoodwinking the electorate that savings are possible in the NHS faced with an additional 372,569 in population by 2039 is just not on,” says GMB Southern

GMB Southern, the union for staff at St Helier and Epsom Hospitals, are attending a public meeting in Sutton, aimed at keeping both the hospitals open.

The St Helier and Epsom Hospitals NHS Trust has guaranteed to maintain acute services at both hospitals till 2020. After that there are proposals to close these acute services at both Epsom Hospital and St Helier Hospital:

· Accident and emergency

· Consultant led maternity

· Paediatrics

· Emergency medicine and surgery

· Intensive care

· Cancer centre

· Coronary care

Proposals from the St Helier and Epsom Hospitals NHS Trust is for a single facility at a site yet to be identified which will involve a loss of 250 beds.

Details for the event are as follows:

Thursday 19th April

8 pm

Thomas Wall Centre (Previously known as the "Adult Centre")

52 Benhill Avenue

Sutton

SM1 4DP

Invited speakers include: Dr Bob Gill and Dr Aislinn Macklin-Doherty

The figures for 7 local authorities are set out in the table attached on the right. This is from a new study by GMB Southern Region of official data from the Office of National Statistics (ONS) for 7 local authorities in South West London and Epsom. It compares the estimated population in 2016, and the projected population for 2039, followed by the change as a figure and as a percentage.

Paul Maloney, GMB Regional Secretary said: "When you consult people it is crucial that the questions asked reflect properly the issues to be dealt with to arrive at a sensible outcome.

"The management are claiming that a high percentage of the people asked were in favour of downgrading both existing acute hospitals in favour of the new single facility at a site yet to be identified which will involve a loss of 250 acute beds.

"If you ask people across South West London and Epsom if, in the light of the ONS population projections of a population growth of 23.9% by 2039, it is sensible to reduce 5 acute hospitals to 4 the overwhelming majority will say that it is the wrong answer.

"GMB call on the St Helier and Epsom Hospitals NHS Trust to withdraw the strategic outline case submitted to NHS Improvement and begin consultations again making clear that we face an unprecedented growth in population and that rebuilding acute hospitals on the existing sites is the only sensible case. It will be expensive but the growing population will generate an expansion of the tax base to pay for this.

"The local politicians and local political parties have to level with the electorate that a growing population will require more facilities not less. Kidding themselves and hoodwinking the electorate that savings are possible in the NHS faced with an additional 372,569 in population by 2039 is just not on. It's time for all to face reality and plan for it."

Contact: Paul Maloney 07801 343 839 or Michelle Gordon 07866 369 259 or GMB Press Office 07970 114 762