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Press release: Over 50 new surgical hubs set to open across England to help bust the COVID-19 backlogs

Department Of Health

August 26
15:47 2022

  • Over 50 new surgical hubs will provide at least 100 more operating theatres and 1,000 more beds to deliver millions more operations
  • These beds and theatres will help reduce waiting times and offer patients access to vital operations
  • Beds will be ring-fenced for planned operations, reducing the risk of short-notice cancellations

Over 50 new surgical hubs will open across the country to help bust the COVID-19 backlogs and offer hundreds of thousands more patients quicker access to vital procedures, the Health and Social Care Secretary Steve Barclay has announced today.

These hubs will provide at least 100 more operating theatres and over 1,000 beds so people get the surgery they need. They will deliver almost 2 million extra routine operations to reduce waiting lists over the next 3 years, backed by 1.5 billion in government funding. This breaks down to over 200,000 extra procedures in 2022 to 2023, over 700,000 extra procedures in 2023 to 2024, and 1 million extra procedures by 2024 to 2025.

They will focus mainly on providing high volume low complexity surgery, as previously recommended by the Royal College of Surgeons of England, with particular emphasis on ophthalmology, general surgery, trauma and orthopaedics (including spinal surgery), gynaecology, ear nose and throat, and urology.

Located on existing hospital sites, surgical hubs bring together skills and expertise of staff under one roof reducing waiting times for some of the most common procedures such as cataract surgeries and hip replacements. These operations can be performed quickly and effectively in one place.Improving quality and efficiency will mean patients have shorter waits for surgery, will be more likely to go home on the same day, and will be less likely to need additional treatment after surgery.

As the hubs are separated from emergency services, surgical beds are kept free for patients waiting for planned operations, reducing the risk of short-notice cancellations and improving infection control.

Health and Social Care Secretary Steve Barclay said:

In order to bust the COVID-19 backlogs and keep pace with future demands, we cant simply have business as usual. Surgical hubs are a really tangible example of how we are already innovating and expanding capacity to fill surgical gaps right across the country, to boost the number of operations and reduce waiting times for vital procedures.

We have already made progress in tackling the longest waiting lists to offer patients quicker access to treatment, and these new surgical hubs will in their own right deliver additional operations over the next 3 years, including over 200,000 this year alone.

NHS chief executive, Amanda Pritchard, said:

Surgical hubs are a vital part of plans to recover elective services across England and these new sites will be a welcome boost in helping us to further tackle the COVID-19 backlogs that have inevitably built up over the pandemic.

The NHS has made significant progress already, virtually eliminating 2 year waits for care by the end of July and from surgical hubs to robotic surgery, our staff continue to find innovative ways to speed up care for patients.

The hubs will also help address variation in performance between trusts, as they are required to meet national standards on numbers of operations, the full use of theatre facilities, and ensuring patients are discharged on the same day as their operation. All of this will help to drive up performance across the country.

The government has worked with the NHS to identify which areas will benefit most from surgical hubs. The selection process for surgical hub locations is clinically led and aims to ensure the new hubs are connected to the right local services such as acute hospital sites and tackle local healthcare inequalities while promoting the best outcomes for patients and delivering value for taxpayers.

So far, locations for 20 new or expanded hubs have already been confirmed, and bids for the remaining hubs are set to be considered over the coming weeks and months as more business cases are received to determine the new sites meet design standards.

The new hubs will offer a mix of outpatient and admitted (including overnight or day case) surgeries, delivering nearly 2 million additional procedures over the next 3 years, equal to 12% of all elective activity in 2019 to 2020. They will encourage the most efficient forms of surgeries, ensuring that fewer patients are kept overnight and saving more time to carry out additional operations.

Currently, 91 surgical hubs have already been opened, meaning that in total more than 140 hubs will be open across England by 2024 to 2025. This includes:

  • the South West London Elective Orthopaedic Centre contains 5 state-of-the-art operating theatres and accepts patients from all over the UK. It performs approximately 5,200 procedures a year, 3,000 of which are joint replacements

  • another hub at the Oxford University Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust has increased surgical capacity by 25%, with improvement plans now in place to significantly reduce cancellations

  • United Lincolnshire Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust has cut down the length of stay for patients undergoing hip and knee replacements, resulting in an average reduction of 2 days and allowing more people to go home the day after surgery

The government has committed 5.9 billion in capital investment to support elective recovery in the coming years. Along with surgical hubs, the NHS is changing the way diagnostic services are delivered by opening over 90 community diagnostic centres across the country in locations such as football stadiums and shopping centres.

They have already delivered over 1.6 million checks, tests and scans, offering patients a range of healthcare services closer to home. By 2025, up to 160 will be up and running.

Thanks to these innovative approaches, significant progress has already been made in tackling waiting lists. Earlier this month, the NHS announced that waits of over 2 years for routine treatment have been virtually eliminated, except where patients chose to wait longer, did not want to travel to be seen faster, or for very complex cases requiring specialist treatment.

This was the first target set out in the Elective Recovery Plan in February and NHS staff continue to make progress on reducing long waits with a drop of almost one third in people waiting 18 months or more for care since January.

Background

The surgical hubs are funded as part of the 1.5 billion allocated at the Spending Review in 2021. This funding is also upgrading existing hubs.

Regional breakdown of projected additional activity and funding:

Region Funding Cumulative elective activity (2022 to 2023 and 2024 to 2025) Cumulative outpatient activity (2022 to 2023 and 2024 to 2025)
East of England 189 million 75,000 10,900
London 265 million 155,600 207,800
Midlands 288 million 151,700 98,300
North East and Yorkshire (NEY) 230 million 120,200 83,200
North West 188 million 153,400 70,300
South East 218 million 181,300 125,200
South West 170 million 50,700 1,700

Elective activity refers to day cases and overnights. Outpatients is non-admitted activity, such as, a procedure that would only be under local anaesthetic.

The additional and expanded 20 hubs announced today are here:

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Region Location New or expansion
London North Middlesex Hospital New
London Western Eye Hospital New
London Purley (Croydon University Hospital) New
London University Hospital Lewisham New
London St Thomas Hospital New
London The Royal National Orthopaedic Hospital (Stanmore) New
London King George Hospital New
London Homerton University Hospital New
London Various locations across North Central London (Moorfields) New
NEY Friarage Hospital New
NEY St. Lukes Hospital New
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