News
Former NHS manager moving to England due to health care concerns

A FORMER senior NHS manager intends to move to England following failures in her husband’s treatment for prostate cancer.
Professor Siobhan McClelland, who lives in Manorbier and is a former Vice Chair of Aneurin Bevan Health Board, said: ‘There is neither capacity nor capability in Welsh Government to be making really good health policy.”
When it comes to health policy, Professor McClelland knows the subject well. She formerly held senior positions as a health economist and health manager. Her experiences of working within the Welsh NHS is substantial.
Apart from her experience on the Aneurin Bevan health board, she chaired the Welsh NHS’s emergency ambulance services committee.
Hywel Dda UHB acknowledges ‘shortcomings’ in Professor McClelland’s husband’s treatment.
Speaking to BBC Wales’ Wales Live programme broadcast on Wednesday (Oct 17) Prof McClelland outlined the successive difficulties in getting GP appointments, referrals for diagnosis, and the failure to spot the spread of her husband’s cancer.
She blamed those failings for making an already difficult situation worse.
Siobhan McClelland continued by observing there was ‘a massive disconnect’ between the experience of being a member of a Health Board or – as in her own experience – being Chair of the Emergency Ambulance Committee and the state of services being delivered to the public.
Prof McClelland told the BBC that she and her husband had lost confidence in the healthcare available and that was one of the reasons they placed their house on the market and were looking to move away from the area.
“We’ve got a fundamental problem here with health boards – not in terms of geographical boundary – but in the autonomous way in which they act.”
Professor McClelland’s most telling criticisms were of the way in which Health Boards lacked leadership from the Welsh Government and local accountability.
She told BBC Wales: “We have a void in Welsh Government where robust, rigorous, innovative health policy should be made.”
Her scorn for the Welsh Government’s ‘nothing to do with me, guv’ approach led straight to the door of current Health Secretary Vaughan Gething and his predecessor Mark Drakeford. Both Mr Gething and Prof Drakeford are candidates to lead the Labour Party in Wales and to succeed Carwyn Jones as First Minister.
Claiming that the current organisational setup was convenient for the Welsh Government as it ‘abdicated responsibility for health board services’, Siobhan McClelland said that both Mark Drakeford and Vaughan Gething ‘struggled to implement policy’.
In the Senedd, however, Vaughan Gething rejected Prof McClelland’s criticism out of hand.
Faced with Rhun ap Iorwerth’s assertion that the words of someone as respected as Professor McClelland were ‘about as damning an indictment as you could hear of your running of the Welsh health service’, Vaughan Gething said he did not accept the system-wide criticism that she makes of Welsh health services.
Pressed by Mr ap Iorwerth, Mr Gething sought refuge behind a Parliamentary Review and an OECD report which he claimed justified his response.
Plaid’s health spokesperson mordantly observed that ‘Professor McClelland has looked at the NHS in Wales and how it’s run probably more forensically than anybody else’ and repeated her criticism of a lack of central direction and asked whether the recently announced increase to the health and social care budget would simply be lost in Boards’ poor financial management.
Instead of answering his opposite number, Labour’s Health Minister suggested that Mr ap Iorwerth seemed to be suggesting a cut in health budgets and said: “I am content with the fact that we understand there are real challenges, and we’re not complacent about actually managing and meeting those.”
Having rubbished Professor McClelland’s substantive complaints about the Welsh Government’s mismanagement of the health service and repeating the line that they operated accountably, the Cabinet Secretary lauded the model for the delivery of social care that had been agreed with third sector bodies, local government and health boards.
Bearing in mind the content of most recent local government discussions on that vexed subject, the casual observer might wonder to which local authorities the Welsh Government had been speaking.
Equally, in highlighting the extent of central control and monitoring and by the way he addressed some of Rhun ap Iorwerth’s points, Vaughan Gething appears to have laid the way for future difficulties in claiming the planned cuts to health services by Hywel Dda UHB are nothing to do with him or the Government he wants to lead.
By claiming to have his hands on the levers of healthcare’s delivery, Mr Gething can hardly now claim they are clean when it comes to decisions about the future of West Wales’ health services.
Crime
Templeton pensioner admits assaulting police officer and making nuisance calls

A TEMPLETON woman has admitted making repeated nuisance calls to emergency services and assaulting a police officer.
Ann Gatley, aged 78, of Chapel Hill Lane, appeared before Llanelli Magistrates’ Court charged with two offences following incidents earlier this month.
The court heard that between April 7 and April 9, Gatley persistently misused the public communications network with the intention of causing annoyance, inconvenience or anxiety.
She was also charged with assaulting a female police officer in the Narberth area on April 9.
Gatley pleaded guilty to both offences when she appeared in court on Thursday (Apr 11).
Magistrates adjourned sentencing to allow for a pre-sentence report to be prepared. Gatley is due to appear at Haverfordwest Magistrates’ Court on May 6.
She was granted bail until that date, with a condition that she must not contact emergency services unless in a genuine emergency.
Crime
Milford Haven man to face trial over knife charge

A MILFORD HAVEN man is set to stand trial accused of carrying a pocket knife with a blade exceeding the legal limit.
Lee Lock, 37, is alleged to have had the knife hidden beneath a car seat while driving through Honeyborough Industrial Estate, Neyland, on June 5, 2024.
The Crown Prosecution Service claims the blade measured 7.62 centimetres in length—over the 7 cm threshold permitted by law.
Lock appeared before Haverfordwest Magistrates’ Court this week via video link from HM Swansea Prison, where he pleaded not guilty to possessing a knife blade in a public place.
His trial has been scheduled for June 9 at Haverfordwest Magistrates’ Court.
Lock, of Coombs Road, Milford Haven, was remanded in custody due to concerns he may fail to surrender to bail.
Crime
Pembrokeshire woman to face trial over crash after alleged cocaine use

A PEMBROKESHIRE woman is to stand trial accused of crashing an Audi into a wall and failing to stop after allegedly driving under the influence of cocaine.
Ruby Owens, aged 33, of Wayside Close, Simpson Cross, Haverfordwest, was arrested on December 21 following a collision at Prospect Place in Pembroke Dock.
She was later charged with four offences: driving with 22 micrograms of cocaine and 480 micrograms of benzoylecgonine (a cocaine metabolite) in her system, driving without due care and attention, and failing to stop after an accident.
Owens appeared before Haverfordwest Magistrates’ Court this week, where she denied all four charges.
Her trial is set to take place at Haverfordwest Magistrates’ Court on June 19. She was released on unconditional bail.
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