BMJ  2004;328:178-179 (24 January), doi:10.1136/bmj.328.7433.178

Editorial

Reconfiguration of surgical, emergency, and trauma services in the United Kingdom

Centralisation of services is politically impossible

The first 150 words of the full text of this article appear below.

To find the royal colleges proposing that acute inpatient care in the United Kingdom should be provided in fewer, larger, better equipped, and better staffed hospitals is not unusual. What would be unusual would be to find a government two years out from a general election rushing to implement such advice. The Senate of Surgery of Great Britain (comprising the four surgical royal colleges, the dental faculties, and 10 surgical specialty associations) has published a policy paper that seeks to speak with a single voice for the surgical community (www.rcpsg.ac.uk/recreport.htm).1 This policy paper signals a wish for a debate on this controversial topic and a wish to participate.

These surgeons want a lot—and not for the first time, and not just the surgeons. The senate suggested something similar in 1997, but it did not happen.2 The Royal College of Physicians wants to phase out acute emergency admissions from . . . [Full text of this article]

Andy Black, health services consultant

Durrow, PO Box 22, Machynlleth SY20 8WQ (abinwales@aol.com)


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