40 community diagnostic centres launching across England
Millions of patients will benefit from earlier diagnostic tests
closer to home thanks to 40 new Community Diagnostic Centres set to
open across England in a range of settings from local shopping
centres to football stadiums. The new one-stop-shops for checks,
scans and tests will be backed by a £350 million investment from
government to provide around 2.8 million scans in the first full
year of operation. The centres will help achieve: earlier diagnoses
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Millions of patients will benefit from earlier diagnostic tests closer to home thanks to 40 new Community Diagnostic Centres set to open across England in a range of settings from local shopping centres to football stadiums. The new one-stop-shops for checks, scans and tests will be backed by a £350 million investment from government to provide around 2.8 million scans in the first full year of operation. The centres will help achieve:
GPs will be able to refer patients to a centre so they can access life-saving checks closer to home and be diagnosed for a range of conditions, rather than travelling to hospital. This will be more convenient for patients, more efficient and more resilient to the risk of cancelled tests in hospitals due to COVID-19. The centres will be staffed by a multi-disciplinary team of staff including nurses and radiographers and are open 7 days a week. All cancer services are back to or above pre-pandemic levels with almost half a million people checked for cancer in June and July – among the highest numbers on record – while more than fifty thousand people started treatment for cancer in the same period, a 32% increase on the same period last year. The centres will continue to further level up access to vital cancer tests and other tests to tackle the backlogs that have built up during the pandemic. The new centres are being rolled out in a host of accessible settings, including:
Secretary of State for Health and Social Care Sajid Javid said: “Tackling waiting lists will require new and more innovative ways of delivering the services people need. That is why we’re making it easier and more convenient to get checked. “Our new Community Diagnostic Centres will bring those crucial tests closer to home including in the communities that need them most. They will help enable earlier diagnosis, allowing us to catch cancer and other issues as quickly as possible, and save more lives." Amanda Pritchard, NHS chief executive, said: "Rapid diagnosis will save lives and these one stop shops for checks, scans and tests in the heart of local communities will not only make services more accessible and convenient for patients but they will also help us to improve outcomes for patients with cancer and other serious conditions, ultimately sparing more patients and families the pain and trauma of disease. “NHS staff have continued to provide routine care, throughout the pandemic, alongside treating around 450,000 seriously ill covid patients in hospital, and the roll-out of these community diagnostic centres will help us to spot problems sooner, when they are easier to treat.” Professor Sir Mike Richards, the first NHS national cancer director who recommended the changes said: “The pandemic brought into sharper focus the need to overhaul the way we deliver diagnostic services and so I am absolutely delighted to see one of the key recommendations of my report becoming a reality for patients so quickly. I have no doubt that many people will benefit from these new NHS Community Diagnostic Centres, bringing together many tests in one convenient place.” The centres will begin providing services over the next six months, with some already up and running, and will be fully operational by March 2022. The centres are one of the recommendations from Professor Sir Mike Richards, the first NHS national cancer director, who conducted a review of diagnostic services as part of the NHS Long Term Plan, published last year. The government recently announced an extra £5.4 billion to the NHS to respond to COVID-19 over the next six months, taking total extra COVID-19 funding to health and care services to over £34 billion this year alone. It builds on the new Health and Social Care Levy, which will see funding rise by a record £36 billion over the next three years. This is on top of a further £36 billion for health and social care across the UK thanks to the Health and Care Levy, which will include £8 billion ring-fenced to tackle backlogs and help the NHS deliver an extra 9 million checks, scans and operations for patients across the country from 2022 onwards. Notes to editors
Case studies Ealing An existing centre in Ealing, London is open 14 hours per day, 7 days per week, 363 days per year. In the last 12 months more than 30,000 NHS patients accessed diagnostic tests at the hub. 100% of appointment slots are filled each day and on average 92% of all appointment slots are attended. Patients are usually offered the first available appointments within 7 to 10 days. The timeliness of appointments and the levels of productivity have been achieved through investment in a patient referral centre (based in Manchester), closely linking the booking and scheduling process with the operating teams at each centre. These services can relieve pressure on hospitals and markedly reduce outpatient referrals and attendances. Barnsley The South Yorkshire & Bassetlaw Integrated Care System is leading the development of a centre in the Glass Works in Barnsley. This part of the Barnsley urban regeneration project and is an existing non-healthcare facility situated within a shops leisure development that is currently being built in the town centre within half a mile of the travel interchange and with 670 parking spaces. This centre will deliver ultrasound, X-ray, breast screening (mammography), phlebotomy and DEXA (bone density scan). The new breast screening services will be a significant boost for the area, as breast screening and breast symptomatic services have been delivered within the same department at Barnsley Hospital NHS Foundation Trust for 30 years with no change in footprint or increase in activity. In the first full year, this new centre will deliver around 13,800 breast screenings. Oldham The Northern Care Alliance serves a third of Greater Manchester population in Salford, Bury, Oldham, Heywood, Middleton, and Rochdale Including many areas with high levels of socio-economic deprivation. They will develop the first phase in Oldham, in a community-based location, 1 mile away from Royal Oldham Hospital. They will provide the most in-demand diagnostic tests including Imaging (CT, MRI, US and PET-CT) alongside respiratory diagnostics and sleep studies. In the first year the site will deliver around 1,925 CT scans, 1,443 MRI scans, 875 Ultrasound and 1,092 sleep studies. |