Secretary of State for Health and Social Care visits Doncaster Royal Infirmary

The Secretary of State for Health and Social Care, Sajid Javid MP, visited Doncaster Royal Infirmary today (Tuesday 15 February) to meet with local health professionals and discuss future plans for the NHS.

The Secretary of State for Health and Social Care, Sajid Javid MP, visited Doncaster Royal Infirmary today (Tuesday 15 February) to meet with local health professionals and discuss future plans for the NHS.

Met by Richard Parker OBE, Chief Executive of Doncaster and Bassetlaw Teaching Hospitals (DBTH), and Suzy Brain England OBE, Chair of the Board and Dame Rosie Winterton, MP for Doncaster Central, the Secretary of State toured a newly developed extension to the site’s Women’s and Children’s Hospital which opened in December 2021, and includes two inpatient areas and a theatre unit. He also heard first-hand about the Trust’s plans for an Urgent and Emergency Care Village at Bassetlaw Hospital, in Worksop, plans for which are currently under consultation following an investment of £17.6 million and, if approved, will see the return of short-stay paediatric care to the site.

Left to right, Sajid Javid MP, Richard Parker OBE, Suzy Brain England OBE and Dame Rosie Winterton MP

Additionally, the Health and Social Care Secretary discussed the organisation’s plans to increase diagnostic capacity, to help reduce the backlog caused by the pandemic, as well as taking the time to speak with a number of colleagues from a range of specialities within the hospital.

Speaking about the visit, the Sajid Javid said: “It was excellent to end day two of my Road to Recovery tour at Doncaster Royal Infirmary – specifically seeing the newly developed extension to the site’s women’s and children’s hospital.

“Their Montagu Hospital site has also been chosen to host one of two community diagnostic centres within South Yorkshire as part of our plans to roll out at least 100 across the country to help millions of patients get earlier access to tests, diagnoses and treatment – helping us to tackle the COVID-19 backlog.

“The Trust is doing excellent work to improve the lives of patients in the region – with a new Urgent and Emergency Care Village in Worksop planned and the separate work it is doing to expand capacity cancer diagnosis, which is a vital part of our national war on cancer.”

In early 2020, following £4.9 million funding, a new CT Suite was developed and opened at Doncaster Royal Infirmary. At the time of its construction, local demand for this form of diagnostic test had increased by 70% over the preceding five years, a figure which has only risen since. Since it’s opening, the new suite allows for an additional 36,000 scans a year across both Doncaster and North Nottinghamshire and its co-location to the nearby Emergency Department has further enhanced its capabilities.

In order to expand this capacity further, DBTH was selected as one of two trusts within the region to host a ‘Community Diagnostic Centre’, based at the organisation’s Montagu Hospital the CDC will receive a portion of the £3 million of funding available. Phase one of the project is now complete with the installation of CT and MRI scanner facilities and it is estimated that by the end of March almost 4,000 patients will have been seen by this new service.

Speaking about the visit, Richard said: “The past two years have been incredibly challenging, and we have welcomed the opportunity to show the Secretary of State for Health and Social Care around our hospital, highlighting the tireless work of our colleagues, as well as underlining the benefits investment has brought to our site throughout this time, how it will help us in our recovery and how we can further improve in the future.

“Like the rest of the NHS, we have a significant amount of work ahead of us to catch-up with the backlog of activity which has accumulated since 2020, whilst also ensuring we have the appropriate capacity available to care for those who are in need of urgent care – however I believe our team at DBTH are more than up to the challenge.”

Left to right, Dr Kirsty Edmondson Jones, David Purdue, Richard Parker OBE and Sajid Javid MP

In the early evening, the Secretary of State concluded the visit by travelling to Montagu Hospital in Mexborough where he met with local people, as well as NHS workers, to answer their questions on a range of topics for around 45 minutes and bringing the occasion to a close.

Dame Rosie Winterton, MP for Doncaster Central said: “I was pleased to see the extension to the Women’s and Children’s Hospital at Doncaster Royal Infirmary, which replaces facilities damaged by a serious water leak. I hope that the Secretary of State’s visit has given him an appreciation that Doncaster is in need of a new hospital. Due to the extensive damage done to the Women’s and Children’s Hospital last year, Doncaster’s bid for a new hospital is now more urgent than ever. I hope that the Secretary of State will greenlight this project as soon as possible.”

As one of Yorkshire’s leading acute trusts, DBTH serves a population of more than 440,000 across South Yorkshire, North Nottinghamshire and the surrounding areas. Employing over 6,600 people across three main hospital sites, the Trust is one of only a handful of Teaching Hospitals in Yorkshire, training 25% of all medical students in the region as well as 30% of all other clinical professions.