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The future of Kingston Hospital is under discussion after leaked evidence from a confidential south-west London-wide review of the NHS backed up MPs claims that closure of the thriving A+E and maternity units was being considered.

Out of 18 options decided on before Christmas by clinicians carrying out the review, 16 involved the loss of a major service at Kingston.

Liberal Democrat MPs have launched a "Save Kingston Hospital Campaign" while Tories say they are not convinced of the threat, but are promising to halt the review if David Cameron comes to power.

To make up your mind keep visiting the Surrey Comet for all the latest news on the hospital.

If you have an opinion or a question you would like to put to the NHS about the review, email Surrey Comet chief reporter David Lindsell at dlindsell@london.newsquest.co.uk

NHS London chief executive admits radical changes will be controversial


This article appeared in the Surrey Comet on March 19, 2010

The woman in charge of reorganising the face of healthcare across London said lives will be saved by a mix of centralising specialist services like A+E and providing more routine care in polyclinics and walk-in centres.

But Ruth Carnall, chief executive of NHS London, admitted the "radical" changes were controversial and NHS London and the Primary Care Trusts which are driving the changes needed to persuade patients of the benefits.

She told a committee of London Assembly members on Tuesday evening there was only one area where a formal public consultation on "reconfiguration" was taking place - north east London - but they wanted to move with "much greater pace and ambition."

She said: "All of the other things you might hear about in newspapers or hear about in petitions are speculative in terms of whether it turns out to be a concrete proposal."

The positive side of getting clinicians together - 98 in south west London - was they could talk about the "right changes" but the downside was "people latching onto the worst possible scenario".

Paul Baumann, NHS London director of finance, repeated that the NHS would be a £4bn to £5bn deficit by 2016 unless changes like diverting people from A+E was carried out.

NHS London insist the changes - which are most far down the line in north east London where A+E services are being downgraded at hospitals - are better for patients and not about cuts, but Labour MPs have joined Tories and Lib Dems there in opposition to the proposals.

Mrs Carnall said of specialist services: "We know we can save people’s lives by centralising those."

But she conceded: "It’s all very controversial. Our challenge is to convince people that this is the right way to receive their healthcare and to implement it quickly."


NHS London chief executive admits radical changes will be controversial NHS London chief executive admits radical changes will be controversial

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