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Tuesday, 7th October 2008

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Anger as health centre plans are downgraded



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Published Date: 09 July 2008
COMMUNITY leaders and residents say they are being short-changed after X-ray facilities and a 60-bed residential unit were cut from health plans.
Musselburgh residents fear they will lose out over the proposed state-of-the-art Musselburgh Health Centre.

The town's community council was due to meet last night to plan a campaign to try to get the previously planned services restored.

Cam
paigners fear the loss of X-ray facilities at the proposed £15 million centre will downgrade it, making it more difficult to attract top talent.

The centre was first proposed in 1998 as a replacement for Edenhall Hospital, but has suffered a series of setbacks. Now residents fear it will not live up to its promise.

Alan Hay, vice-chairman of Musselburgh Community Council, said: "We were promised state-of-the-art facilities.

"But now they are taking the X-ray away because they say they cannot get the staff to operate it. However, they have managed to get the staff for new facilities in Dalkeith.

"Without the X-ray facilities we won't get the consultants and that will damage the overall quality of the health centre."

He added: "We need the 60-bed residential unit for people from Musselburgh. They don't want to have to stay in Edinburgh, particularly if they are coming to the end of their lives, they want to be close to home.

"We gave up Edenhall on the promise we were going to get this state-of-the-art health centre and a bedded unit. Now we seem to be losing out."

East Lothian Council is currently undertaking a consultation on its elderly people strategy, which is expected to be completed by the end of September.

It says the early indications are that it has enough residential beds for elderly people, with 1396 in East Lothian, 89 provided by the council itself.

A spokeswoman for East Lothian Council said: "There is an overriding wish from people to remain independent as long as possible and to be able to access services from their own home. It is therefore highly unlikely there is a requirement for a further 60 beds."

Gerry Power, general manager of East Lothian Community Health Partnership, NHS Lothian, said: "X-ray facilities for the East Lothian population will continue to be provided at Roodlands Hospital and the Royal Infirmary of Edinburgh which have excellent and established facilities."

www.nhslothian.scot.nhs.uk
www.eastlothian.gov.uk





The full article contains 417 words and appears in Edinburgh Evening News newspaper.
Page 1 of 1

 
1

rs,

in ma house 09/07/2008 18:01:40
£700m for 5 miles of road in Glasgow

£513m for 11 miles of tram track in Edinburgh

but not enough for essential Health services?

get you priorities right
2

Tolle1,

09/07/2008 18:25:26
70 bed Cockenzie House Nursing Home closed recently.

Proposed 60 bed residential unit scrapped.

Everybody stood by when the above nursing home closed, and unless you all wake up, and realise NHS Lothian and East Lothian Council policy is for elderly people to be cared for at home, whether they are able to cope or not, then this con-trick new residential unit will never have a hope of being built.

3

Ian down under,

Kawerau 09/07/2008 21:21:02
#2 Spot on.
I realise that this centre is for other uses other than elderly care but the vindictive closure of Cockenzie House has left a huge gap in the ability to provide services.
Don't forget that to keep some frail and elderly people at home can involve more resources both people and equipment than providing care in homes.
Most people in their 80s can live at home and in fact 95% do so independently but we should not forget that the number of elderly is rising so more people will need residential care in the next few decades.

 

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