Get all your news in one place.
100’s of premium titles.
One app.
Start reading
Liverpool Echo
Liverpool Echo
National
Lisa Rand

Concerns over impact of new Royal Liverpool hospital on vulnerable Sefton patients

Concerns have been raised about the impact the opening of the new Royal Liverpool hospital may have on some vulnerable Sefton residents.

The concerns relate to the capacity of the new Royal, which will have 132 less beds than the current site.

According to a Sefton Council cabinet update released this week “there are concerns regarding how as a system the bed occupancy is reduced to eighty-five per cent of its present capacity to facilitate the opening of the new building.

READ MORE: DWP could boost Universal Credit by £25 a week under new plan

”The report notes there will be “increased pressure to free any capacity from all sites” as a result of the opening of the hospital.

It adds there are “discussions taking place currently about the transfer of patients needing ongoing treatment from Royal to beds at Aintree and Longmoor House.”

Sefton Adult social care is expecting, as a result of these pressures, to see “increased scrutiny” over the flow of patient discharges, potentially exacerbating already existing challenges of moving some patients from hospital to care environments.

The new Royal Liverpool hospital is due to open on September 28 following a five year delay. The construction was beset by problems, largely a result of the collapse of construction giant Carillion, the previous contractor.

Current contractor, Laing O’Rourke, took over the finish of the build after Carillion’s collapse, handing over some of the building to Liverpool University Hospital Trust last month.

The long awaited move across from the old Royal to the new is expected to take 24 days and is due to be complete by October 21.

READ NEXT:

People in Sefton waiting up to 17 hours for an ambulance

Cyber incident led to Sefton out-of-hours closure as NHS services stretched

Family 'highly distressed' over plan to turn former bank into 'cramped' bedsits

Schools expecting kids to turn up 'poorly nourished' during cost of living crisis

£5m expansion plans for Sefton primary school

Sign up to read this article
Read news from 100’s of titles, curated specifically for you.
Already a member? Sign in here
Related Stories
Top stories on inkl right now
Our Picks
Fourteen days free
Download the app
One app. One membership.
100+ trusted global sources.