Tens of millions needed to catch up with backlog of hospital and health trust building repairs across Peterborough area
On top of that, Cambridgeshire and Peterborough NHS Foundation Trust, which looks after the area’s mental health care services, needs to spend more than £2 million to restore and repair its buildings.
The body representing health trusts, NHS Providers, have warned that the speed at which the NHS estate is falling into disrepair is putting patients’ lives at greater risk and making it more difficult for frontline staff to provide the right quality of care.
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Hide AdFigures from NHS Digital show that at the end of March last year, North West Anglia NHS Foundation Trust needed £60.2 million worth of work to eliminate the backlog of maintenance required at its sites.
Of the total, £8.5 million was needed to eradicate high-risk issues to avoid serious injuries to patients, major disruption to services or “catastrophic failure”.
This included £7.5 million at Hinchingbrooke Hospital and £902,000 at Stamford and Rutland Hospital
Around £20 million should have been spent on items posing a significant risk to safety or delivery of services.
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Hide AdHigh and significant backlog maintenance usually relates to essential activity, such as replacing a backup generator.
Around £31.7 million was required for medium and low grade maintenance, which typically relates to improving the patient environment and can include the refurbishment and repainting of a building.
Hinchingbrooke Hospital required £49.5 million in maintenance investment and Stamford and Rutland Hospital needed £9 million.
A further £1.6 million needs to be spent across other sites, which are not listed in the data.
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Hide AdThe figures also reveal the trust spent £3.9 million to cut its maintenance backlog in 2019-20.
In December, the Government announced a £600 million scheme to help trusts eradicate the backlog – with North West Anglia NHS Foundation Trust awarded £2.2 million towards six projects.
Cambridgeshire and Peterborough NHS Foundation Trust needed £2.9 million worth of work last year to eliminate the backlog of maintenance required at its sites.
Of the total, £41,100 was needed to eradicate high-risk issues including £4,250 at Fulbourn Hospital and £350 at Addenbrookes Hospital.
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Hide AdAround £36,500 needs to be spent on high risk items across other sites not listed.
Around £1.5 million should have been spent on items posing a significant risk to safety or delivery of services.
Around £1.4 million was required for medium and low grade maintenance.
Sites needing this investment were Fulbourn Hospital (£791,000); Ida Darwin Hospital (£583,000) and Addenbrookes Hospital (£134,000).
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Hide AdA further £1.4 million needs to be spent across other sites.
The figures also reveal Cambridgeshire and Peterborough NHS Foundation Trust spent £376,000 to cut its maintenance backlog in 2019-20.
In December, the Government announced a £600 million scheme to help trusts eradicate the backlog – with Cambridgeshire and Peterborough NHS Foundation Trust awarded £271,000 towards three projects.
Across England, £9 billion should have been spent on eradicating the backlog of maintenance work required across all NHS trusts.
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Hide AdOf that, more than £1.5 billion was due for the most urgent repairs.
Overall, it cost £9.7 billion to run the entire NHS estate in the last financial year, the figures show.
Chris Hopson, chief executive of NHS Providers, said: “The backlog is now broadly equivalent to the annual cost of running the entire NHS estate.
“More worrying still, over half of this is for work of high or significant risk.
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Hide Ad“In short, this problem poses an increasing threat to safety.”
Mr Hopson said it is also impacting on the response to the pandemic, with a “dramatic” rise in demand for oxygen in recent months placing a strain on supply.
He added: “Trusts have upgraded several hospital systems over the past few months to prepare, however many trusts are telling us that the deteriorating state of the NHS estate is having an impact on the supply of oxygen.
“Our members have also been telling us how difficult it is proving to expand capacity at pace and ensure high quality infection control in old, outdated buildings.
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Hide Ad“Unfortunately it is patients and service users who are paying the price for this backlog.”
A spokesman for the Department of Health and Social Care said it is investing “record sums” to upgrade NHS buildings.
“Alongside funding to deliver 48 hospitals and 20 major hospital upgrades across the country, we are providing £600 million to tackle nearly 1,800 urgent maintenance projects across 178 trusts,” he added.
“This is on top of the NHS’s existing capital budgets which are directed to local maintenance priorities.”
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