Conservative who decried regional reconfiguration wins Ipswich
Conservative Ben Gummer has taken Ipswich.
Mr Gummer had said East of England strategic health authority’s reconfiguration plans threatened to turn Ipswich Hospital into a “glorified treatment centre”.
Angioplastic surgery is to be moved to Norwich and Cambridge from the facility run by the Ipswich Hospital Trust.
HSJ Post-Election Briefing - Monday 10th May 2010
Attend HSJ’s post-election briefing for an immediate reaction on what the general election result means for you and your organisation.
- Venue: The ICO (International Coffee Organisation), 22 Berners Street, London W1T 3DD
- Delegates may pay at the door or book in advance.
- Find out more: www.hsj-postelectionbriefing.com
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Election 2010: how to survive the calm after the storm
Election 2010: constituency watchlist for the NHS
Care minister Phil Hope loses seat to Conservatives
Health minister Gillian Merron loses seat to Conservatives
Health minister Mike O'Brien loses seat to Conservatives
Health minister Ann Keen loses seat to Conservatives
Hewitt's adviser wins for Labour
Tory health team hold seats
Conservative who campaigned to stop maternity service move wins seat
Labour MP opposing A&E closure returned
Norman Lamb holds seat
Labour cling onto Tooting after trust chair criticises Tory candidate
Campaigning doctor loses seat
MP who fought reconfiguration returned
General hospital at heart of three-way battle in Watford
MPs hold on in Whittington row seats
Lib Dems take target seat where Clegg promised a re-opened A&E
Tories take seat facing maternity unit closure
Sacked hospital chief's MP bid falls flat
Shadow health minister pledging fresh look at hospital configuration elected
Burnley A&E campaigner loses seat
PFI revelation fails to tip balance to Lib Dems in North East battleground seat
Labour keeps seat where they accused Conservatives of 'scare' tactics on hospital
MP who branded hospital downgrade 'barking mad' returned
Warwickshire result casts doubt on NHS reconfiguration proposals
Health figures to enter new parliament
Kramer loses seat despite hospital campaign
Hospital campaign MPs retain seats by small margin
Patient groups call for urgent government action
Gone but not forgotten - the Labour health team
Gordon Brown to quit as Labour leader







Readers' comments (1)
Anonymous | 7-May-2010 2:58 pm
So on the one hand, its "leave the NHS to manage itself, without interference", but on the other its "ah, but not if it affects my local hospital (and there are votes in it)". Political hypocrisy.
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