Future of North Yorkshire hospital to be discussed at public meeting

The future of a hospital ward forced to close six months ago amid a staffing crisis will be discussed at a public meeting next week.
The meeting takes place on Tuesday.
Photo: Dominic Lipinski/PA WireThe meeting takes place on Tuesday.
Photo: Dominic Lipinski/PA Wire
The meeting takes place on Tuesday. Photo: Dominic Lipinski/PA Wire

The 14-bed ward at Lambert Memorial Hospital in Thirsk, which specialises in end of life care and rehabilitation, was temporarily closed in September 2015 to address patient safety concerns due to staffing pressures. Since then, South Tees Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust, which runs the hospital, says it has made its “best efforts” to recruit skilled nursing staff onto the ward, but it still falls short of the numbers required to run it safely.

In the months before closure, staff from the Friarage Hospital and other Trust sites were used to boost numbers, but this put pressure on their own nursing teams, the Trust said. Existing staff at the Lambert were already working extra hours, and following closure, extra provisions were put in place at the Friarage, and a local care home.

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Earlier this month, a new palliative care scheme was put in place at Sowerby House Care Home, supported by Thirsk GPs and community nurses.

The Trust’s director of nursing, Gill Hunt said: “It would be wrong to keep our staff, patients and the local population waiting any longer to hear about the future of the ward and nobody wants to be in a position where the ward is constantly opened and closed due to staffing difficulties. That is not the way to run a service.”

The meeting, a Thirsk School at 6pm on Tuesday March 22, will come ahead of a formal public consultation.

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