news story
16th May 2006
"Standing Up For South Gloucestershire"
Campaigners Welcome Reprieve For Local Health Trust
Click here to read Steve Webb's response in the House of Commons
Liberal Democrat campaigners in South Gloucestershire are today
celebrating the news that plans to abolish the
area's Primary Care Trust have been ditched by
the Government following a storm of local
protest. The Lib Dem-led "standing up for
South Gloucestershire" campaign had argued
that the area needed its own health trust to
make sure that the area's particular health needs were not swallowed up
in a new "Greater Bristol" health trust.
They also told ministers that joint working between South
Gloucestershire Council and South
Gloucestershire Primary Care Trust was producing good results in
providing better care, especially for people
needing both health care and social care.
There had been fears that this advice was to
be ignored as the Strategic Health Authority
recommended to the Government that the four PCTs serving Bristol,
North Somerset and South Gloucestershire
should still be merged.
But today in the House of Commons, health minister
Andy Burnham issued a statement showing
that the Government had decided in favour of keeping separate health
trusts for South Gloucestershire, Bristol
(merging only the existing Bristol North and Bristol
South & West PCTs) and North Somerset.
Steve Webb, the Lib Dems health spokesman, who responded to the
statement in the House of Commons, said:
"This is a very welcome announcement, and a victory for the "Standing up
for South
Gloucestershire" campaign. At long last, the Government has
recognised that we are not simply a
suburb of Greater Bristol, we are an area in
our own right with our own needs and
priorities.
"The good news is
that our local health staff can get on with the
job of improving patient care instead of being distracted by yet
another round of reorganisations.
I congratulate everyone who took part in the campaign and who
made their views known".
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