All along, we have said that the closure of the ward was for financial reasons, that it was due to impact of closing the 22 male beds in Burnley and that it was until The Harbour opened. The Trust have denied this.
They have denied this on BBC Radio, in the Lancaster Guardian, to our service users in response to our letter of complaint and in the letters to the MPs. Below are some of the things that have been said.
- "The intention isn't for this to run for weeks and weeks".
- "I would like to reassure you that the use of The Orchard as an all-male facility is very much a temporary measure."
- "This isn't for financial reasons."
- "This has nothing to do with the closure of the ward in Burnley."
To reiterate:-
This was a short term, temporary measure that wasn't for financial reasons and had nothing to do with the closure of 22 beds in Burnley.
The FOI information should have backed this up. The Trust have been consistent in their reply and surely they would not give misleading information to the media, their service users or the MPs would they?
Perhaps we're misunderstanding what we've been sent, but here is some of the information provided to us from our FOI requests.
From 9/9/14 Sustainability Minutes - Suggestion made to open male ward on Darwen as no extra staff will be required. Discussed use of the Orchard as a ‘flexible friend’ to support longer term pressures of gender demand and we could scale down females to make all male to support this transition.
Longer term pressures of gender demand. Please note: Longer term pressures. Not short term pressures. Making the ward all male for longer term pressures.
Many thanks for your input and pragmatism yesterday in the meeting around managing the correct number of male vs female bed reductions, in line with our need to close a ward in total this financial year.
Our need to close a ward in this financial year. Please note: Close in financial year, for financial reasons.
We all agreed we couldn’t manage with the loss of 22 male beds though so we agreed mitigation plans (some dates for the mitigation actions below TBC):
We couldn't manage with the loss of 22 male beds. Please note: The closure of the 22 male beds in Burnley was acknowledged as unmanageable and therefore would have a known impact on the rest of the inpatient provision provided by the Trust.
TH suggested using The Orchard as a flexible ward if the network is under pressure for male or female beds for a period of time. The current female patients could be moved to Scarisbrick Unit. AW stated that as the Orchard is a standalone unit it would have to be clear which patients could be admitted as there is only 1 seclusion room. The ward would be flexible until the opening of the Harbour.
Flexible until the opening of the Harbour. Please note: Until the opening of The Harbour. The hospital due to open in March 15 if it runs to time.
There are other details in the FOI information, mainly talking about where they were going to make up the shortfall of beds, and talk of the transitional period - which we believe to be the period before the beds being closed and The Harbour opening.
What is clear is that what we said all along was true. That the women of North Lancashire were the victims of cost cutting measures and the closure of the Male ward in Burnley and that the Closure of the ward was until The Harbour opened.
Shame on you Lancashire Care NHS Trust. Shame on you for treating your female service users like this.
Full response publicly available here.
Shame on them for not being straight and admitting it in the first place.
ReplyDeleteHow can any of us trust them now?
Disgusted!
Thank you for your comment. Its a question we'll be asking publicly.
ReplyDeleteDefinitely serious errors here.
ReplyDelete1 That no one would bother to find out what was true and what was not
2 That in the face of stonewalling tactics, complaints would die a speedy death.
3 The most serious error seems to be based on the apparent assumption that women who have mental health problems are not capable (when they are well) of investigating and researching what is being done and trying to raise awareness of the issue in the wider community. Had this been realised sooner, the NHS representatives might have avoided having their dirty linen broadcast far and wide, and there for the future as evidence for anyone else trying to deal with similar issues.
The most frightening issue I have noticed on this blog, and in discussions with others reading the blog, tweets and the petition is the fear that some posters have of being denied help if they are seen to complain.
We suspect that the Trust did not expect to be challenged and certainly not that any challenge would gain the publicity that we have. One of our tweeps last week tweeted the Trust about how underestimating us was a mistake, though it's not over yet.
ReplyDeleteIt worries us as well that people are so scared to speak out against the Trust that provides our care. That alone should be an action point for the Trust to look into why that is the case.
We are lucky to have some truly exceptional people on our side, who have the knowledge and determination to really make a change. It never fails to astound me how much people can do when they're really passionate about something.
A POEM OF REVELATION
ReplyDelete-SILENCE-
Silence...
Shh... Shh...
Ssshhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhh...
...Lancashire Care is sleeping...
...WITHOUT A CARE!
Whilst they sleep... Shh Shh
Women of North Lancashire...
TOSS AND TURN...
MILES AWAY From HOME...
HOURS AWAY From FAMILY...
DISTANT From The SOUND OF FRIENDS...
BLIND To FAMILIAR SURROUNDS...
HOMESICK And SUFFERING Far More With The Added STRESS
On Top Of STRESS
On Top Of STRESS
On Top Of STRESS
On Top Of STRESS
Of...
[ SEPARATION]
Shh... Shh
Lancashire Care is SLEEPING...
WITH OUT A CARE ! ! !
Shh... Shh...
Shhhhhh...
'Do NOT DISTURB'
Do not complain women;
UNDERSTAND:
it's all for
"THE GREATER GOOD!"
(Dibble paraphrasology _ Radio Lancashire)
JESS
Jess! Thank you for our very first poetry comment.
ReplyDeleteIt's made us all smile. Thank you :-)