North Middlesex Hospital is being taken over by Royal Free London NHS Foundation Trust, reports Grace Howarth, Local Democracy Reporter
North Middlesex University Hospital NHS Trust is set to complete its merger with Royal Free London NHS Foundation Trust by the end of this year, bosses have confirmed.
At North Mid’s annual general meeting yesterday (Thursday 5th) the trust’s bosses said they felt confident about the merger and that they were on track to complete the move in the next few months.
Royal Free London runs multiple hospitals in Camden and Barnet boroughs, as well as Chase Farm Hospital in Enfield, while the trust at North Mid is much smaller and is responsible only for the Edmonton hospital.
It is hoped the merger will result in significant benefits.
Dr Nnenna Osuji, North Mid’s chief executive, described this week’s annual board meeting as a “moment in time” as it could be the last before the merger. She proceeded to thank the team, staff, and local community for “being with us on this journey”.
“Usually the annual report looks back at 23/24 but potentially this may be our last meeting as a sovereign organisation,” she said.
Dr Osuji summed up what had been a “tumultuous” past year for the NHS, with a rate of change “like nothing we’ve ever seen”.
“I want to recognise as a leadership we have stood together through unprecedented change.
“We’ve gone through the Covid-19 pandemic, which is a thing in itself, post-Covid, we’ve got a new government, and we’ve looked more recently at interesting but uncomfortable social commentary within the media.”
Haringey councillor Pippa Connor questioned the trust’s financial position and the merger’s impact, as Royal Free “tended to have more ‘negative’ in its accounting” and North Mid had “raised some concern around costs”.
Mark Lam, the chair of both organisations, acknowledged the financial climate was more “challenging nationally” but felt confident the trusts could deliver “our numbers” alongside “great and safe care”.
He refuted the claim around Royal Free’s “negative” financial situation, saying its finances were in a “much better position” than they had been several years ago and that the trust was in fact “leading” in this field.
Lam said: “In regards to the merger, the finances are going to be additive, so it’s not that one [trust] would compensate the other, and I can give you absolute assurance of that.
“The merger is also not intended to be used for savings, that’s not why we’re doing it. It’s intended to give us the opportunity to deliver legal and long-term clinical changes and pathway reconfiguration that will serve our populations better, right across North London.
“We’ve been very clear about that in the submission of our case, and NHS England has accepted that and that’s what will go to the secretary of state, so it’s all being done for the right reasons.
“As chairman for both organisations I feel under no pressure at all in terms of the money.”
No news is bad news
Independent news outlets like ours – reporting for the community without rich backers – are under threat of closure, turning British towns into news deserts.
The audiences they serve know less, understand less, and can do less.
If our coverage has helped you understand our community a little bit better, please consider supporting us with a monthly, yearly or one-off donation.
Choose the news. Don’t lose the news.
Monthly direct debit
Annual direct debit
£5 per month supporters get a digital copy of each month’s paper before anyone else, £10 per month supporters get a digital copy of each month’s paper before anyone else and a print copy posted to them each month. £50 annual supporters get a digital copy of each month's paper before anyone else.
More information on supporting us monthly or yearly
More Information about donations