Thursday, July 22nd,'2004 .No. 6,158.
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CPs’ out-of-hours opt out by Rebecca Wright
EMERGENCY medical services in the Ribble Valley are to be dramatically altered following new Government legis
lation. . The introduction of the new general medi
cal services contract has given GPs across the country the right to opt-in or opt-out of pro viding 24-hour medical services - a controver sial move that has resulted in all Ribble Val ley GP’s opting out. Currently, the local Ribblesdale Emergency Medical Service (REMS) provides a 24-hour call-out service where local GPs are on hand to attend medical emergencies in and around the rural area.. A new system will operate from September
1st - leaving people increasingly anxious about the level of health care that will be pro vided in the area. Although 24-hour GP cover will still be pro vided, it will be on a rota basis - and operated by GPs mostly from Blackburn and Burnley.
There will be an improved NHS Direct ser
vice, where qualified nurses are available 24 hours to offer advice and diagnosis over the phone - and refer patients to the ambulance service if the situation is serious. There will also be emergency nurses avail
able a t the Clitheroe Health Centre, who will be on hand to offer home visits where they are needed. Ribble Valley MP Mr Nigel Evans said this
week that he was “hugely worried" about the effects of the loss of the REMS service and voiced concerns about the Ribble Valley receiving an "inferior" service. The area, he said, was huge and known to
rural GPs. “Yet again, Ribble Valley folk are subsidis
ing urban areas and we will become the Cin derella recipients of the NHS,” he warned. . One rural Valley resident contacted the
Advertiser and Times this week to express his concerns. “The REMS was a vital service on our
doorstep," he said. "It is a real shock that it is closing down.
“I once called out the REMS service in an
emergency and it took the GP over 30 minutes to reach me, and that was from Clitheroe. “If the GPs are travelling from Blackburn
and Burnley it could be well over an hour. That could mean a big difference in an emer gency. However, the Hyndburn and Ribble Valley
Primary Care Trust, which has now taken on the responsibility of covering the out-of-hours medical care of the Ribble Valley, denied that would be the case. Associate director of modernisation and
head of primary care at the PCT Mr Derrek Cummings said: “We have estimated that the GPs from Blackburn with Darwen Doctors' Co-op will be able to reach anywhere in the Ribble Valley within half-an-hour". The organisation is currently negotiating
with Ribble Valley GPs who may yet choose to opt back into the out-of-hours health care once the new service is up and running.
Valley council homes sell-off threat
THE ownership of the Ribble Val ley’s remaining council houses could transfer to a privately-run company depending on the out come of a major consultation exer cise.
Council tenants are being asked
to act as “judge and jury” on four options on the future of housing stock drawn up by Ribble Valley Borough Council at a public event on Thursday, September 2nd.
The options are: retaining them,
transferring them to a registered social landlord, setting up an “arms length management” scheme whereby the houses would be looked after by a board of coun cil officers, members and tenants, or entering into a Private Finance Initiative (PFI), which will mean transferring management and maintenance of the properties to a' private company for 30 years.
Central Government has
ordered all councils across the country to assess their housing stock and ensure they meet the required standards - the Decent Homes Standard - by 2010. Chief Executive of Ribble Val
ley Borough Council Mr David Morris explained th a t even though all the Ribble Valley’s 1,220 council houses were in “good condition”, the council still had to
take part in this mandatory exer cise and formulate a plan for future investment. Roadshows have already been
staged by the council’s housing department to inform tenants of the exercise. They began in Lon- gridge in June with the last one taking place in Chipping. Ribble Valley Borough Council
A royal date for civic pai
THE man believed to be the country's oldest mayor has spoken to the Queen. However, it was not
Coun. Charles Wark- man's age - 86 - th a t caught the attention of her equerries, but the Ribble Valley crest on
the tie he was wearing. The meeting in the
grounds of Buckingham Palace was "a wonderful experience" said the Rib ble Valley's Mayor, who was accompanied by his wife, Ruth. • Full story, turn to
page 2. PAGES 22,23 ■ AT YOUR SERVICE... PAGES 8,9 ■ VILLAGE NEWS... PAGES 11,12,13
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