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Patient safety row as Plaid and Labour clash before Bronglais Hospital protest Bronglais protesters demand protection for hospital
(about 1 hour later)
A row over patient safety has broken out between Plaid Cymru and the Labour Welsh government ahead of a protest by hospital campaigners. Protesters have called on the health minister to protect services at Abserystwyth's Bronglais Hospital.
Plaid said lives were being put at risk with plans "to move life-saving services further away from patients". Hundreds of campaigners have held a demonstration outside the Welsh assembly, prompted by fears that services could be moved elsewhere.
But the health minister disputed that and accused Plaid of "dangerous scaremongering". Hywel Dda Health Board says no decisions have been made.
Campaigners who fear a cut in services at Aberystwyth's Bronglais Hospital protested at the Senedd in Cardiff. It comes amid a political row about the safety of patients, with the Welsh government accusing opponents of scaremongering.
Concerns have been raised by senior staff at Bronglais Hospital that services could be moved to West Wales General Hospital in Carmarthen.Concerns have been raised by senior staff at Bronglais Hospital that services could be moved to West Wales General Hospital in Carmarthen.
Ahead of Wednesday afternoon's protest, Plaid Cymru health spokesperson and Ceredigion AM Elin Jones cited research by the Medical Care Research Unit at the University of Sheffield. A delegation including former Labour MP Lord Elystan-Morgan met Health Minister Lesley Griffiths after people from across mid Wales protested on the steps of the Senedd in Cardiff Bay on Tuesday.
It investigated the relationship between distance to hospital and patient mortality in emergencies. He told the protest that Bronglais had been "run down" before the creation of Hywel Dda Health Board, which is responsible for the NHS in mid and west Wales.
Plaid said the research concluded that "increased journey distance to hospital appears to be associated with increased risk of mortality". "But when Hywel Dda came to be that process was accelerated and accelerated with gusto," he said.
Plaid claimed the Welsh government had given the go-ahead to local health boards to bring forward plans that downgraded hospitals and centralised core services. The crowd jeered Mrs Griffiths's name as they were addressed by politicians from the main parties.
Ms Jones said: "It is important that people have access to life-saving services within a safe distance of their homes, but under Labour's centralisation plans, services are to be moved further away. Mid and West Wales Labour AM Joyce Watson was drowned out when she told the crowd she had a "clear message that the government has no plans to downgrade Bronglais".
"The added risk to patients' safety is extremely concerning, and it's something that Labour responded to when they gave assurances that they would not downgrade hospitals during the election campaign." The hospital serves Ceredigion, parts of Powys and south Gwynedd, and it is the only district general hospital in mid Wales.
A spokesperson for Health Minister Lesley Griffiths said the Welsh government did not "intend to see the downgrading of any health services in Wales". Busloads of people from the region travelled to the Welsh capital on Wednesday.
Ceredigion AM Elin Jones, of Plaid Cymru, said she rejected Labour's claim she had been "scaremongering".
"This isn't party political. This is about the people of mid Wales having the right to live within an hour of emergency hospital intervention that can save lives," she said.
'False information'
Local Liberal Democrat MP Mark Williams said: "The decisions and the governance of the health services in Wales is in this place.
"Part of that responsibility is to hold the health board to account."
In a statement issued after the hospital was raised in the Senedd on Tuesday, First Minister Carwyn Jones said people had been given "false information which is causing unnecessary concern and unease".
You'd be forgiven for having a sense of deja vu over today's events.You'd be forgiven for having a sense of deja vu over today's events.
Patients with placards on the steps of the Senedd are not a new phenomenon.Patients with placards on the steps of the Senedd are not a new phenomenon.
The last attempts at hospital reorganisation in 2006 resulted in similar scenes - with busloads arriving from as far afield as Llandudno, Haverfordwest and Builth Wells.The last attempts at hospital reorganisation in 2006 resulted in similar scenes - with busloads arriving from as far afield as Llandudno, Haverfordwest and Builth Wells.
Ultimately those demonstrations led to the most controversial plans being ditched, and today's campaigners will hope to yield similar results.Ultimately those demonstrations led to the most controversial plans being ditched, and today's campaigners will hope to yield similar results.
But the need for modernisation hasn't gone away - the status quo, according to the Welsh government, is not an option.But the need for modernisation hasn't gone away - the status quo, according to the Welsh government, is not an option.
This time around the stakes have been raised by the disquiet of so many doctors.This time around the stakes have been raised by the disquiet of so many doctors.
Earlier this month 50 senior medics from Bronglais signed a letter to say they had lost all confidence in their health board.Earlier this month 50 senior medics from Bronglais signed a letter to say they had lost all confidence in their health board.
That clearly undermines the theory hospital reorganisation in 2012 will be driven by clinicians, not accountants.That clearly undermines the theory hospital reorganisation in 2012 will be driven by clinicians, not accountants.
The spokesperson added: "It's our intention to improve the NHS. He said: "I would like to make it perfectly clear, there are no plans to close Bronglais Hospital. There are no plans to downgrade Bronglais Hospital. District general hospitals, like Bronglais, will continue to be district general hospitals.
"That's why local health boards across Wales are currently in listening mode, to establish how services can be improved, to make them safe, sustainable, effective and as near to home as possible in the years ahead.
"To suggest that life-saving services are to be moved further away as a matter of fact is at best disingenuous, at worst untrue dangerous scaremongering."
The Welsh government challenged Plaid Cymru to "produce the evidence or stop scaring people".
Following exchanges about Bronglais during first minister's questions, Carwyn Jones released a statement saying there were no plans to close or downgrade the hospital.
"I understand how strongly people feel about their local hospital, and that is why I am deeply concerned that people are being given false information which is causing unnecessary concern and unease amongst the immediate and wider community the hospital serves," said Mr Jones.
"I would like to make it perfectly clear, there are no plans to close Bronglais Hospital. There are no plans to downgrade Bronglais Hospital. District general hospitals, like Bronglais, will continue to be district general hospitals.
"Our commitment to Bronglais is clear - and reinforced by the £38m investment we have made in the hospital over the past few years.""Our commitment to Bronglais is clear - and reinforced by the £38m investment we have made in the hospital over the past few years."
Bronglais serves Ceredigion, parts of Powys and south Gwynedd, and it is the only district general hospital in mid Wales. A spokesperson for Mrs Griffiths said the Welsh government did not "intend to see the downgrading of any health services in Wales".
Twelve buses and three mini buses from the region travelled to the Welsh capital on Wednesday. Health boards "are currently in listening mode, to establish how services can be improved, to make them safe, sustainable, effective and as near to home as possible in the years ahead", the statement added.
Six buses and three student mini-buses made the trip from Aberystwyth, while others left Aberaeron, Tregaron, Machynlleth and Llanidloes in Powys, and two went from Tywyn, Gwynedd. "To suggest that life-saving services are to be moved further away as a matter of fact is at best disingenuous, at worst untrue dangerous scaremongering."
Local politicians and campaigners addressed the protesters outside the Senedd, and then they will then meet Mrs Griffiths for talks. Hywel Dda said more than 1,100 people had attended eight public meetings as part of a "listening and engagement exercise".
Ahead of the protest, Labour councillor and Aberystwyth mayor Richard Boudier said it was important the NHS evolved, but the health board's plans were both "life threatening and dangerous". In a statement it said: "This is not a consultation but a series of engagement events with the public, staff and stakeholders aimed at increasing understanding of the challenges facing the NHS in Wales, debating local healthcare provision and informing future consultation options.
One of the campaigners, Peter Gardner, told BBC Radio Wales that cuts to hospitals services were already being made. "No change is not an option as our services must meet safety and quality standards and we will not consider unsafe solutions."
"Hywel Dda [health board] has already started the insidious downgrading of Bronglais," he said. A formal consultation is due to take place later this year.
He is among the group due to meet with the health minister later.
Hywel Dda Health Board said no decisions had been made about the future of Bronglais.
The protest follows a meeting in Aberystwyth on 10 February attended by nearly 550 people who supported a motion to reject Hywel Dda Health Board's plans.