Public Outcry Grows over A&E Closures


Residents pack local church to plan fight for hospitals

Hundreds of local residents packed into Hammersmith's Rivercourt Methodist Church on Thursday evening, to discuss how to fight NHS plans to close A&E departments at Charing Cross and Hammersmith Hospital.

Hammersmith MP Andy Slaughter, who organised the meeting, urged the local community to come together to fight the plans. He has also raised the issue this morning, Friday June 29, in the House of Commons and says he is expecting a response from Health Secretary Andrew Lansley.

You can read a full statement from Andy Slaughter on the NHS proposals here.

Anger among local residents attending the meeting was reflected in their tweets on Twitter, hashtag #savehfnhs with Joe Harrod saying: "Sheer madness - Hammersmith and Fulham to lose both A&E departments". Melanie Smallman said: "Just checked Google maps - it will take one hour 12 minutes to get to my nearest A&E under current plans." And Margybargy summed up people's feelings saying: "For heaven's sake don't have an accident round here if they are closing ALL the local A&E departments."

The meeting came as plans to close four Accident & Emergency (A&E) units in North West London, including those at Charing Cross and Hammersmith, moved a step closer with the Joint Committee of Primary Care Trusts agreeing to formally propose closing them at a meeting in Westminster Central Hall on Monday.

The NHS proposals include downgrading Charing Cross and Hammersmith hospitals from "major" centres, with a wide range of clinical specialisms, to  "local" hospitals.

Charing Cross and Hammersmith would both lose their A&Es under the NHS preferred option and the hyper-acute stroke unit at Charing Cross would also go. The NHS consultation begins in July.

Hammersmith and Fulham Council, which has promised to fight the plans "tooth and nail" is also campaigning against the propoals and urging local people to make their views heard.

" The public outcry at these proposals has already been huge with almost 2,000 signatures on our petitions in less than a week,” says Cllr Marcus Ginn, H&F cabinet member for community care. "Changing NHS minds to reverse these plans is not going to be easy and we want to show them the real human impact of the changes they are pushing."

To lend your voice to the campaign, the council is asking resident to sign online petitions at Save Charing Cross and Save Hammersmith and to talk about how our local hospitals have helped you at

Tell us how our local hospitals have helped you - we want to show how important our hospitals are. Did the doctors and nurses there save your life? Did they care for a spouse or relative and nurse them back to strength? Did you have an operation that changed your life for the better?
Comment on our website at Your stories.

You can also write to the council with a picture of you and your story to Save Our Hospitals, Room 39, Hammersmith Town Hall, King Street, W6 9JU, or email your story (and a JPEG photo of yourself if you have one) to shareyourviews@lbhf.gov.uk.

The council has also launched a Facebook page where people can share their stories.

H&F council is also sending leaflets on the plans to every household in the borough, which have a poster on the back for people to put up in their windows to show their support.

There is also a separate independent online petition which already has over 1,600 signatures. You can add your name here.

 

June 29, 2012