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Nevill Hall Hospital Proposals PDF 374 KB
Additional documents:
Minutes:
Hannah Evans (Executive Director of Strategy, Planning &
Partnerships) delivered a presentation and answered the
members’ questions with Dr Paul Mizen (Clinical Lead for
Service Transformation).
Key Points
from Hannah Evans' Presentation
- Context and Purpose: Hannah explained
the focus on Nevill Hall Hospital due to the presence of reinforced
autoclaved aerated concrete (RAAC), which poses infrastructure
risks and has made the site a priority for investment and
redevelopment.
- Strategic Importance: Nevill Hall is
positioned as a key site for both local and regional healthcare
delivery, with recent investments such as a new radiotherapy unit
and a regional cataract hub, serving not just Gwent but also
neighbouring regions.
- Service Developments: There has been a
20% increase in day surgery at Nevill Hall, and the hospital is
being developed as a surgical hub, with plans to expand day
surgery, assessment facilities, and outpatient
services.
- RAAC Challenge: The presence of RAAC
affects significant parts of the estate, requiring mitigation
measures like propping and scaffolding, but the long-term goal is
to remove RAAC and use this as an opportunity to right-size and
modernise the hospital.
- Business Case Process: The
redevelopment is at the strategic outline case (SOC) stage, which
involves early engagement, defining the case for change, and
preparing for more detailed planning and consultation in later
business case stages.
- Emerging Service Model: Plans include
a day surgery centre of excellence, integrated front
door/assessment facilities, maintaining the minor injuries unit,
expanding cancer services (radiotherapy and chemotherapy),
developing a women’s health hub, and improving diagnostics
and therapy services.
- Engagement and Consultation: The team
is actively engaging with staff, stakeholders, and the public
through surveys, meetings, and direct outreach, seeking feedback on
the case for change and emerging principles, with a commitment to
ongoing involvement throughout the redevelopment
process.
Key
Questions from Members
Councillor Edwards
- Asked who instigated the Nevill Hall redevelopment –
Health Board or Welsh Government, and why, seeking clarity on the
process and investment case.
Hannah
confirmed the Health Board initiated the process, with Welsh
Government support, due to the urgency created by RAAC. Nevill Hall
was always on the estate strategy, but RAAC made it a top
priority.
- Expressed concern that the consultation might give the public
unrealistic expectations, questioning what specialist inpatient
services (e.g., respiratory, gastroenterology, cardiology,
paediatrics) will realistically be available at Nevill Hall, given
current service limitations.
Hannah
clarified that acute specialties (e.g., cardiology,
gastroenterology, paediatrics) will not return to Nevill Hall, as
centralisation at the Grange was necessary for sustainability and
quality. Outpatient and some day-case services will be provided at
Nevill Hall, but not acute inpatient specialties.
- Queried the extent of cancer treatment at Nevill Hall, noting
radiotherapy is available but chemotherapy and haematology are
limited, and asked about reliance on community fundraising for
these services.
Hannah and
Paul explained that radiotherapy is now available at Nevill Hall,
with plans to expand chemotherapy and other cancer services in
partnership with Velindre.
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