Ashford and St Peter's Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust

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Ashford and St Peter's Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust
Created December 2010 (2010-12)
Region served Chertsey and Ashford, Surrey, England
Type NHS hospital trust
Chair Aileen McLeish
Chief Exec Suzanne Rankin
Website www.ashfordstpeters.nhs.uk

Ashford and St Peter's Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust is a medium sized district general hospital working across two sites in Surrey: St Peter's Hospital in Chertsey and Ashford Hospital.[1]

Ashford Hospital was developed from the former Staines Workhouse Infirmary which had been operated as an emergency hospital during World War II. St Peter's had been developed on the Botleys Park site in Chertsey. [2]

Ashford Hospital & St. Peter’s Hospital NHS Trusts were merged on 1 April 1998. It became a Foundation Trust in December 2010.

A plan for the trust to take over Epsom General Hospital was abandoned in October 2012 by NHS London board because a financially viable plan for the future of Epsom hospital as part of the merged trust could not be developed.[3] In May 2014 it was reported that the Trust was proposing to merge with Royal Surrey County Hospital NHS Foundation Trust.[4]

In October 2013 the trust was categorised as a band six, the best rating, in a hospital intelligence monitoring report published by the Care Quality Commission.[5]

The Trust did poorly in the last cancer patient experience survey and has agreed to pair up with St Helens and Knowsley Teaching Hospitals NHS Trust, which did very well, in a scheme intended to “spread and accelerate innovative practice via peer to peer support and learning”.[6]

Two of Ashford Hospital’s wards, used by the elderly for rehabilitation care, were closed in June 2015 after a review carried out by the Clinical Commissioning Group found patients recovered better away from acute hospitals. Rehabilitation will in future be at Walton Community Hospital, Woking Hospital, nursing homes or at patients' own homes.[7]

Suzanne Rankin, the Chief Executive, was formerly senior nursing officer with Queen Alexandra's Royal Naval Nursing Service where she served in the first Gulf War.[8]

See also

References

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External Links