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Update on Emergency General Surgery and response to the SOAS Roadmap recommendations.

22/01/2026

Update On EGS And Response To SOAS

Following considerable feedback from staff and the public, the Western Health and Social Care Trust is providing detailed updates now in respect of the following:

  • Western Trust Response Brief to the SOAS Roadmap – 20 Recommendations – Download here
  • Western Trust Update Statement and current position in respect of Emergency General Surgery – Download here

The Trust respects the work undertaken by SOAS in producing the Roadmap and appreciate the significant time and effort which the hospital campaign pressure group have taken to put forward its 20 recommendations. We recognise the deep interest and concern within the community about the future of health and care services in Fermanagh and West Tyrone.  We hope to work alongside local people through the networks and representatives they know and are familiar with to shape a vision for safe and sustainable health and care services into the future.

SOAS have put forward 20 proposed recommendations.  We agree with some of these, as they align closely with work that we already have underway in the Trust, and with the Department of Health, or we have made clear are our strategic direction of travel. Others will require decisions or leadership at regional, national or cross-border level if they are to move forward.  We must be clear that a small number of recommendations cannot be supported, because they do not meet the Department of Health’s clinical standards for safe care of surgical patients or commissioning requirements.

Our initial position on the Roadmap recommendations is set out in the attached summary brief, and we welcome dialogue with the SOAS group and all stakeholders as our work progresses.

Commenting, Western Trust Chief Executive Neil Guckian said:

“I want to acknowledge the strength of feeling in Fermanagh and West Tyrone about local health services and to thank everyone who has engaged with the SOAS Roadmap. We recognise how important South West Acute Hospital is to the community it serves.”

“Patient safety must always be our first priority. The independent clinical evidence we have shows that outcomes have improved since the temporary service change in 2022, with fewer complications, readmissions and deaths. This matters because it means safer care for patients.”

“Many of the Roadmap’s recommendations reflect work we are already taking forward, and we share the ambition to continue building strong, sustainable services locally. Where recommendations cannot be progressed, it is because they do not currently meet clinical safety standards or require decisions that sit outside the Trust’s control.”

“We remain absolutely committed to SWAH as a vital acute hospital and to continuing open, honest and respectful engagement with the community as we develop a long-term vision for health and social care in Fermanagh and West Tyrone.”

Update on Emergency General Surgery

In addition, the Trust is providing a detailed update highlighting our current position in respect of Emergency General Surgery within the Trust area, since the temporary suspension of Emergency General Surgery at SWAH was implemented in December 2022. This change was an ‘Emergency Measure’ and a matter of ‘Public Safety’ due to significant and ongoing difficulties in recruiting and retaining the required consultant workforce, which meant that there were NO substantive Consultant General Surgeons available to work on the emergency rota at the hospital. This position was further influenced by the introduction of revised Emergency General Surgery Safety Standards by the Department of Health in June 2022.

The Trust is now fully compliant with the revised Emergency General Surgery standards introduced in June 2022. These standards were designed to ensure that patients across Northern Ireland receive safe, specialist emergency surgical care, regardless of where they live.

Compliance has required significant transformation of the Trust’s consultant workforce and the establishment of a 24/7 upper gastrointestinal bleeding pathway.

Independent clinical data shows that patient outcomes have improved since the temporary service change in 2022, based on that analysis by Caspe Healthcare Knowledge Systems (CHKS), which benchmarks all Trusts in Northern Ireland. These improvements indicate safer care and improved recovery outcomes for patients across the Western Trust area.

In addition, a significant number of patients are now safely treated each year through ambulatory pathways at SWAH and Altnagelvin. Over 5 patients per day presenting at SWAH receive same-day or next-day assessment and treatment, and 2.5 patients per day are transferred for inpatient care and treatment to Altnagelvin Hospital.

Mr Neil Guckian, Chief Executive:

“These improvements mean that patients across the Western Trust, wherever they live, now have a better chance of survival and better recovery outcomes,”

The Trust will continue to work closely with staff, patients, communities, elected representatives and partner organisations to ensure that future services are safe, sustainable and responsive to local needs.

For more information of the Fermanagh and West Tyrone Future Health and Care Services click here