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Hinchingbrooke Hospital: Circle to withdraw from contract | Hinchingbrooke Hospital: Circle to withdraw from contract |
(34 minutes later) | |
A company which became the first private firm to manage an NHS hospital says it wants to "withdraw from its contract". | A company which became the first private firm to manage an NHS hospital says it wants to "withdraw from its contract". |
Circle Holdings, which operates Hinchingbrooke Hospital in Cambridgeshire, said its franchise is "no longer viable under current terms". | Circle Holdings, which operates Hinchingbrooke Hospital in Cambridgeshire, said its franchise is "no longer viable under current terms". |
The move comes amid funding cuts and pressure on the casualty department, Circle said. | The move comes amid funding cuts and pressure on the casualty department, Circle said. |
The Department of Health said it was "disappointed" in the decision. | The Department of Health said it was "disappointed" in the decision. |
Circle took on Hinchingbrooke in early 2012, as it faced closure. | |
'Unsustainable' | |
It said there had been unprecedented increases in accident and emergency attendances, a lack of care places for patients awaiting discharge, and that funding had been cut by 10.1% this financial year. | |
Circle has made payments to the trust totalling about £4.84m and could be required to make a final support payment of approximately £160,000, the firm said. | |
Under its contract, it has the right to end the franchise if the amount of money it has to put in to the trust goes over £5m. | |
Chief executive Steve Melton said: "This combination of factors means we have now reluctantly concluded that, in its existing form, Circle's involvement in Hinchingbrooke is unsustainable." | |
Circle chairman Michael Kirkwood said the decision had been made "with regret and after considerable thought". | |
Analysis | |
By Nick Triggle, BBC health correspondent | |
Circle has quickly looked to place the blame on the way things have worked out with Hinchingbrooke Hospital on the current conditions in the NHS, citing rising A&E attendances and the squeeze on funding. | |
Those issues have almost certainly had a role to play in the decision to pull out of the contract. | |
But there is undoubtedly more to it than that - after all the current pressures have not just appeared from nowhere. They were building when the idea of the contract started being discussed in 2009. | |
When Circle took over, there were question marks over whether the firm was being too ambitious in claiming it could turn the hospital around. | |
Hinchingbrooke had been called a "basket case" with historic debts of nearly £40m. | |
Within six months of Circle taking over, losses were twice what was forecast. However, as time went by improvements to services were made. | |
But still they could not escape the past. The Care Quality Commission has just carried out an inspection of the hospital. | |
It is yet to be published, but Circle knows the contents. It is widely expected to be critical. | |
The GMB Union said the Circle takeover had been the "disaster waiting to happen when you get the private sector involved in running a hospital". | |
Spokesman Steve Sweeney said: "It's not overly surprising to see them try to pack their bags, cut loose and walk away. | |
"Obviously having the major backers walk away leaves [the hospital] in a very vulnerable position .... we're hoping that there's some planning in place to aid and assist that." | |
A spokesman for the Department of Health said: "There will now be a "managed transfer of the running of the trust and patient care will not be affected." | |
The company said it is in discussion with the NHS Trust Development Authority to ensure an "orderly withdrawal". |