Draft Greater Cambridge Planning Obligations Supplementary Planning Document re-consultation - 2025

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Comment

Draft Greater Cambridge Planning Obligations Supplementary Planning Document re-consultation - 2025

Chapter 22: Healthcare

Representation ID: 201069

Received: 17/10/2025

Respondent: Cambridge University Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust

Representation Summary:

We welcome the positive approach to primary‑care provision set out in section 22 of the SPD.

Full text:

Cambridge University Hospital NHS Foundation Trust (CUH) has previously commented on the earlier consultation stages and most of our suggestions have been onboarded. We appreciate this is now a very advanced stage of the documents production and in this regard, we have sought to limit suggested changes to the document.

Rather, we wish to set out our position going forward there will be a need to update the position on mitigation of Healthcare impacts arising from development, as the new Local Plan moves forward having particular regard to the likely scale of anticipate, and the effects this will have on an already stretched NHS infrastructure in Cambridgeshire.


Comments on the SPD:

We welcome the positive approach to primary care provision in section 22 of the document, secured
through proactive engagement with colleagues at the ICS.

We have previously requested that the Planning Obligations SPD is left suitably flexible to allow
contributions to be sought for a broader spectrum of healthcare impacts. We note that the emphasis
remains on mitigating the effects on Primary Care, which is understandable at the current time. We
very much welcome the reference and acknowledgement at para 22.19 that growth may also give rise
to “For strategic scale proposals, there may be additional requirements for health infrastructure
related to acute, mental health and/or community health provision….”. This may not only be the case
for strategic sites, and we wish to explore how the health impacts of all development can be mitigated,
as cumulative pressure arising from small or medium sized developments makes a material difference
to our service provision.

We wish to maintain an open dialogue with our NHS partners across the Integrated Care System, and
with you as Local Authority, to ensure we secure the best possible outcomes for the healthcare system
when assessing and mitigating the impacts of future development, in particular with an eye on acute,
mental health and community health provision, and the pressures on the system arising from
population growth.

Acute Care Strategy - Update

To reinforce this, I wish to provide a brief overview of the work we have been doing to move this
agenda forward. As you will be aware from the letter I submitted in January 2025, CUH has used the
£3m allocated by the Ministry of Housing, Communities and Local Government (MHCLG) in 2024 to
develop a long-term plan for acute healthcare services on the Cambridge Biomedical Campus (CBC)
and surrounding areas, underpinned by a radical new acute care model.

Our vision is for CUH to operate in partnership across the health and care system to co-design a
Neighbourhood Health Service that supports people to stay well in their own communities. Specialist
input, diagnostics, urgent help and research participation will be available in neighbourhood hubs
and virtual settings, networked with the acute hospital. Attendance on the Cambridge Biomedical
Campus will only be for those with emergencies requiring stabilisation, or urgent needs which
cannot be met elsewhere.

By moving to more proactive, personalised care, we will reduce healthcare costs, improve outcomes
for our citizens, and demonstrate a new model of sustainable healthcare. Cambridge is uniquely
placed to develop and demonstrate the benefits of this new model. We have the innovation, scientific
and research partners and life sciences leadership to capitalise on our unique wealth of health data
and develop the AI driven predictive health tools for the wider NHS.

Implications for NHS Estate

Our new model of care is essential in managing the significant population growth planned locally in
the coming years, on top of the ca 18% growth in the past decade. Investment in infrastructure on
the campus is essential: our current Emergency Department (ED) was built for a quarter of the
patients it currently receives and over 70% of the Trust’s acute estate is classified as being in poor or
bad condition.

Implementing this new model of care will enable us to reduce the size of the new acute hospital
required on the CBC from over 2,000 beds to just over 1,000 beds (compared to our current acute
capacity of 850 beds). Alongside this essential new capacity on site, our model involves the
development of community Urgent and Emergency Care Hubs, networked into Neighbourhood
Health Centres, which enable patients to access more efficient, proactive acute care closer to home.
We will look to rationalise estate in some areas, be more efficient in sharing of property assets, and
of course, where significant growth is identified, seek to ensure appropriate additional provision in
high growth areas.

We are already implementing short to medium term work packages which can start to improve care
across the Cambridgeshire system today, while we continue to develop and implement the longer
term ambitions. Alongside this, we are seeking funding to progress this work to Outline Business Case
level, including developing a revamped Estates Strategy, a clear capital plan for CUH on-campus, and
supporting community proposals. We would be very happy to discuss further and to share the Acute
Care Strategy Interim Report, which has been shared with various parts of Government, including
DHSC, MHCLG, and the Cambridge Growth Company.

Feedback and Next Steps
We have not provided any specific comments on the document (save for one minor factual correction
at Appendix A), recognising that you have considered, and partially accepted the changes suggested
in our earlier representations, including the wider definition of health infrastructure.

We anticipate that work on the Acute Care Strategy will provide a sound platform for us to develop a
new Estates Strategy linked to the roll out of new models of care, and to apply and embed this having
regard to the planned growth of the area. Our ambition is to ensure that new developments make a
fair and reasonable contribution to mitigating impacts on critical NHS infrastructure across all
elements – primary, acute, mental health and community.

Appendix A – Proposed Minor Changes

Paragraph 22.10 – the bullet point referencing the hospitals within the ICS should be reworded to read
“Three Hospitals (Addenbrooke’s Hospital, the Rosie Maternity Hospital, Royal Papworth
Hospital)"

Comment

Draft Greater Cambridge Planning Obligations Supplementary Planning Document re-consultation - 2025

Chapter 22: Healthcare

Representation ID: 201070

Received: 17/10/2025

Respondent: Cambridge University Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust

Representation Summary:

We ask that the SPD remains suitably flexible so contributions can be sought for a broader spectrum of health‑care impacts, including acute, mental‑health and community health services, not just primary care.

Full text:

Cambridge University Hospital NHS Foundation Trust (CUH) has previously commented on the earlier consultation stages and most of our suggestions have been onboarded. We appreciate this is now a very advanced stage of the documents production and in this regard, we have sought to limit suggested changes to the document.

Rather, we wish to set out our position going forward there will be a need to update the position on mitigation of Healthcare impacts arising from development, as the new Local Plan moves forward having particular regard to the likely scale of anticipate, and the effects this will have on an already stretched NHS infrastructure in Cambridgeshire.


Comments on the SPD:

We welcome the positive approach to primary care provision in section 22 of the document, secured
through proactive engagement with colleagues at the ICS.

We have previously requested that the Planning Obligations SPD is left suitably flexible to allow
contributions to be sought for a broader spectrum of healthcare impacts. We note that the emphasis
remains on mitigating the effects on Primary Care, which is understandable at the current time. We
very much welcome the reference and acknowledgement at para 22.19 that growth may also give rise
to “For strategic scale proposals, there may be additional requirements for health infrastructure
related to acute, mental health and/or community health provision….”. This may not only be the case
for strategic sites, and we wish to explore how the health impacts of all development can be mitigated,
as cumulative pressure arising from small or medium sized developments makes a material difference
to our service provision.

We wish to maintain an open dialogue with our NHS partners across the Integrated Care System, and
with you as Local Authority, to ensure we secure the best possible outcomes for the healthcare system
when assessing and mitigating the impacts of future development, in particular with an eye on acute,
mental health and community health provision, and the pressures on the system arising from
population growth.

Acute Care Strategy - Update

To reinforce this, I wish to provide a brief overview of the work we have been doing to move this
agenda forward. As you will be aware from the letter I submitted in January 2025, CUH has used the
£3m allocated by the Ministry of Housing, Communities and Local Government (MHCLG) in 2024 to
develop a long-term plan for acute healthcare services on the Cambridge Biomedical Campus (CBC)
and surrounding areas, underpinned by a radical new acute care model.

Our vision is for CUH to operate in partnership across the health and care system to co-design a
Neighbourhood Health Service that supports people to stay well in their own communities. Specialist
input, diagnostics, urgent help and research participation will be available in neighbourhood hubs
and virtual settings, networked with the acute hospital. Attendance on the Cambridge Biomedical
Campus will only be for those with emergencies requiring stabilisation, or urgent needs which
cannot be met elsewhere.

By moving to more proactive, personalised care, we will reduce healthcare costs, improve outcomes
for our citizens, and demonstrate a new model of sustainable healthcare. Cambridge is uniquely
placed to develop and demonstrate the benefits of this new model. We have the innovation, scientific
and research partners and life sciences leadership to capitalise on our unique wealth of health data
and develop the AI driven predictive health tools for the wider NHS.

Implications for NHS Estate

Our new model of care is essential in managing the significant population growth planned locally in
the coming years, on top of the ca 18% growth in the past decade. Investment in infrastructure on
the campus is essential: our current Emergency Department (ED) was built for a quarter of the
patients it currently receives and over 70% of the Trust’s acute estate is classified as being in poor or
bad condition.

Implementing this new model of care will enable us to reduce the size of the new acute hospital
required on the CBC from over 2,000 beds to just over 1,000 beds (compared to our current acute
capacity of 850 beds). Alongside this essential new capacity on site, our model involves the
development of community Urgent and Emergency Care Hubs, networked into Neighbourhood
Health Centres, which enable patients to access more efficient, proactive acute care closer to home.
We will look to rationalise estate in some areas, be more efficient in sharing of property assets, and
of course, where significant growth is identified, seek to ensure appropriate additional provision in
high growth areas.

We are already implementing short to medium term work packages which can start to improve care
across the Cambridgeshire system today, while we continue to develop and implement the longer
term ambitions. Alongside this, we are seeking funding to progress this work to Outline Business Case
level, including developing a revamped Estates Strategy, a clear capital plan for CUH on-campus, and
supporting community proposals. We would be very happy to discuss further and to share the Acute
Care Strategy Interim Report, which has been shared with various parts of Government, including
DHSC, MHCLG, and the Cambridge Growth Company.

Feedback and Next Steps
We have not provided any specific comments on the document (save for one minor factual correction
at Appendix A), recognising that you have considered, and partially accepted the changes suggested
in our earlier representations, including the wider definition of health infrastructure.

We anticipate that work on the Acute Care Strategy will provide a sound platform for us to develop a
new Estates Strategy linked to the roll out of new models of care, and to apply and embed this having
regard to the planned growth of the area. Our ambition is to ensure that new developments make a
fair and reasonable contribution to mitigating impacts on critical NHS infrastructure across all
elements – primary, acute, mental health and community.

Appendix A – Proposed Minor Changes

Paragraph 22.10 – the bullet point referencing the hospitals within the ICS should be reworded to read
“Three Hospitals (Addenbrooke’s Hospital, the Rosie Maternity Hospital, Royal Papworth
Hospital)"

Comment

Draft Greater Cambridge Planning Obligations Supplementary Planning Document re-consultation - 2025

Chapter 22: Healthcare

Representation ID: 201071

Received: 17/10/2025

Respondent: Cambridge University Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust

Representation Summary:

We wish to keep an open dialogue with NHS partners across the Integrated Care System and the Local Authority to ensure the best possible outcomes for the health‑care system when assessing and mitigating the impacts of future development, particularly regarding acute, mental‑health and community health provision.

Full text:

Cambridge University Hospital NHS Foundation Trust (CUH) has previously commented on the earlier consultation stages and most of our suggestions have been onboarded. We appreciate this is now a very advanced stage of the documents production and in this regard, we have sought to limit suggested changes to the document.

Rather, we wish to set out our position going forward there will be a need to update the position on mitigation of Healthcare impacts arising from development, as the new Local Plan moves forward having particular regard to the likely scale of anticipate, and the effects this will have on an already stretched NHS infrastructure in Cambridgeshire.


Comments on the SPD:

We welcome the positive approach to primary care provision in section 22 of the document, secured
through proactive engagement with colleagues at the ICS.

We have previously requested that the Planning Obligations SPD is left suitably flexible to allow
contributions to be sought for a broader spectrum of healthcare impacts. We note that the emphasis
remains on mitigating the effects on Primary Care, which is understandable at the current time. We
very much welcome the reference and acknowledgement at para 22.19 that growth may also give rise
to “For strategic scale proposals, there may be additional requirements for health infrastructure
related to acute, mental health and/or community health provision….”. This may not only be the case
for strategic sites, and we wish to explore how the health impacts of all development can be mitigated,
as cumulative pressure arising from small or medium sized developments makes a material difference
to our service provision.

We wish to maintain an open dialogue with our NHS partners across the Integrated Care System, and
with you as Local Authority, to ensure we secure the best possible outcomes for the healthcare system
when assessing and mitigating the impacts of future development, in particular with an eye on acute,
mental health and community health provision, and the pressures on the system arising from
population growth.

Acute Care Strategy - Update

To reinforce this, I wish to provide a brief overview of the work we have been doing to move this
agenda forward. As you will be aware from the letter I submitted in January 2025, CUH has used the
£3m allocated by the Ministry of Housing, Communities and Local Government (MHCLG) in 2024 to
develop a long-term plan for acute healthcare services on the Cambridge Biomedical Campus (CBC)
and surrounding areas, underpinned by a radical new acute care model.

Our vision is for CUH to operate in partnership across the health and care system to co-design a
Neighbourhood Health Service that supports people to stay well in their own communities. Specialist
input, diagnostics, urgent help and research participation will be available in neighbourhood hubs
and virtual settings, networked with the acute hospital. Attendance on the Cambridge Biomedical
Campus will only be for those with emergencies requiring stabilisation, or urgent needs which
cannot be met elsewhere.

By moving to more proactive, personalised care, we will reduce healthcare costs, improve outcomes
for our citizens, and demonstrate a new model of sustainable healthcare. Cambridge is uniquely
placed to develop and demonstrate the benefits of this new model. We have the innovation, scientific
and research partners and life sciences leadership to capitalise on our unique wealth of health data
and develop the AI driven predictive health tools for the wider NHS.

Implications for NHS Estate

Our new model of care is essential in managing the significant population growth planned locally in
the coming years, on top of the ca 18% growth in the past decade. Investment in infrastructure on
the campus is essential: our current Emergency Department (ED) was built for a quarter of the
patients it currently receives and over 70% of the Trust’s acute estate is classified as being in poor or
bad condition.

Implementing this new model of care will enable us to reduce the size of the new acute hospital
required on the CBC from over 2,000 beds to just over 1,000 beds (compared to our current acute
capacity of 850 beds). Alongside this essential new capacity on site, our model involves the
development of community Urgent and Emergency Care Hubs, networked into Neighbourhood
Health Centres, which enable patients to access more efficient, proactive acute care closer to home.
We will look to rationalise estate in some areas, be more efficient in sharing of property assets, and
of course, where significant growth is identified, seek to ensure appropriate additional provision in
high growth areas.

We are already implementing short to medium term work packages which can start to improve care
across the Cambridgeshire system today, while we continue to develop and implement the longer
term ambitions. Alongside this, we are seeking funding to progress this work to Outline Business Case
level, including developing a revamped Estates Strategy, a clear capital plan for CUH on-campus, and
supporting community proposals. We would be very happy to discuss further and to share the Acute
Care Strategy Interim Report, which has been shared with various parts of Government, including
DHSC, MHCLG, and the Cambridge Growth Company.

Feedback and Next Steps
We have not provided any specific comments on the document (save for one minor factual correction
at Appendix A), recognising that you have considered, and partially accepted the changes suggested
in our earlier representations, including the wider definition of health infrastructure.

We anticipate that work on the Acute Care Strategy will provide a sound platform for us to develop a
new Estates Strategy linked to the roll out of new models of care, and to apply and embed this having
regard to the planned growth of the area. Our ambition is to ensure that new developments make a
fair and reasonable contribution to mitigating impacts on critical NHS infrastructure across all
elements – primary, acute, mental health and community.

Appendix A – Proposed Minor Changes

Paragraph 22.10 – the bullet point referencing the hospitals within the ICS should be reworded to read
“Three Hospitals (Addenbrooke’s Hospital, the Rosie Maternity Hospital, Royal Papworth
Hospital)"

Comment

Draft Greater Cambridge Planning Obligations Supplementary Planning Document re-consultation - 2025

Chapter 22: Healthcare

Representation ID: 201072

Received: 17/10/2025

Respondent: Cambridge University Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust

Representation Summary:

Our Acute Care Strategy highlights the need for significant investment in NHS estate on the Cambridge Biomedical Campus, including a reduction in the size of the new acute hospital and the development of community urgent‑care hubs, which should be reflected in future planning‑obligation mitigation.

Full text:

Cambridge University Hospital NHS Foundation Trust (CUH) has previously commented on the earlier consultation stages and most of our suggestions have been onboarded. We appreciate this is now a very advanced stage of the documents production and in this regard, we have sought to limit suggested changes to the document.

Rather, we wish to set out our position going forward there will be a need to update the position on mitigation of Healthcare impacts arising from development, as the new Local Plan moves forward having particular regard to the likely scale of anticipate, and the effects this will have on an already stretched NHS infrastructure in Cambridgeshire.


Comments on the SPD:

We welcome the positive approach to primary care provision in section 22 of the document, secured
through proactive engagement with colleagues at the ICS.

We have previously requested that the Planning Obligations SPD is left suitably flexible to allow
contributions to be sought for a broader spectrum of healthcare impacts. We note that the emphasis
remains on mitigating the effects on Primary Care, which is understandable at the current time. We
very much welcome the reference and acknowledgement at para 22.19 that growth may also give rise
to “For strategic scale proposals, there may be additional requirements for health infrastructure
related to acute, mental health and/or community health provision….”. This may not only be the case
for strategic sites, and we wish to explore how the health impacts of all development can be mitigated,
as cumulative pressure arising from small or medium sized developments makes a material difference
to our service provision.

We wish to maintain an open dialogue with our NHS partners across the Integrated Care System, and
with you as Local Authority, to ensure we secure the best possible outcomes for the healthcare system
when assessing and mitigating the impacts of future development, in particular with an eye on acute,
mental health and community health provision, and the pressures on the system arising from
population growth.

Acute Care Strategy - Update

To reinforce this, I wish to provide a brief overview of the work we have been doing to move this
agenda forward. As you will be aware from the letter I submitted in January 2025, CUH has used the
£3m allocated by the Ministry of Housing, Communities and Local Government (MHCLG) in 2024 to
develop a long-term plan for acute healthcare services on the Cambridge Biomedical Campus (CBC)
and surrounding areas, underpinned by a radical new acute care model.

Our vision is for CUH to operate in partnership across the health and care system to co-design a
Neighbourhood Health Service that supports people to stay well in their own communities. Specialist
input, diagnostics, urgent help and research participation will be available in neighbourhood hubs
and virtual settings, networked with the acute hospital. Attendance on the Cambridge Biomedical
Campus will only be for those with emergencies requiring stabilisation, or urgent needs which
cannot be met elsewhere.

By moving to more proactive, personalised care, we will reduce healthcare costs, improve outcomes
for our citizens, and demonstrate a new model of sustainable healthcare. Cambridge is uniquely
placed to develop and demonstrate the benefits of this new model. We have the innovation, scientific
and research partners and life sciences leadership to capitalise on our unique wealth of health data
and develop the AI driven predictive health tools for the wider NHS.

Implications for NHS Estate

Our new model of care is essential in managing the significant population growth planned locally in
the coming years, on top of the ca 18% growth in the past decade. Investment in infrastructure on
the campus is essential: our current Emergency Department (ED) was built for a quarter of the
patients it currently receives and over 70% of the Trust’s acute estate is classified as being in poor or
bad condition.

Implementing this new model of care will enable us to reduce the size of the new acute hospital
required on the CBC from over 2,000 beds to just over 1,000 beds (compared to our current acute
capacity of 850 beds). Alongside this essential new capacity on site, our model involves the
development of community Urgent and Emergency Care Hubs, networked into Neighbourhood
Health Centres, which enable patients to access more efficient, proactive acute care closer to home.
We will look to rationalise estate in some areas, be more efficient in sharing of property assets, and
of course, where significant growth is identified, seek to ensure appropriate additional provision in
high growth areas.

We are already implementing short to medium term work packages which can start to improve care
across the Cambridgeshire system today, while we continue to develop and implement the longer
term ambitions. Alongside this, we are seeking funding to progress this work to Outline Business Case
level, including developing a revamped Estates Strategy, a clear capital plan for CUH on-campus, and
supporting community proposals. We would be very happy to discuss further and to share the Acute
Care Strategy Interim Report, which has been shared with various parts of Government, including
DHSC, MHCLG, and the Cambridge Growth Company.

Feedback and Next Steps
We have not provided any specific comments on the document (save for one minor factual correction
at Appendix A), recognising that you have considered, and partially accepted the changes suggested
in our earlier representations, including the wider definition of health infrastructure.

We anticipate that work on the Acute Care Strategy will provide a sound platform for us to develop a
new Estates Strategy linked to the roll out of new models of care, and to apply and embed this having
regard to the planned growth of the area. Our ambition is to ensure that new developments make a
fair and reasonable contribution to mitigating impacts on critical NHS infrastructure across all
elements – primary, acute, mental health and community.

Appendix A – Proposed Minor Changes

Paragraph 22.10 – the bullet point referencing the hospitals within the ICS should be reworded to read
“Three Hospitals (Addenbrooke’s Hospital, the Rosie Maternity Hospital, Royal Papworth
Hospital)"

Comment

Draft Greater Cambridge Planning Obligations Supplementary Planning Document re-consultation - 2025

Chapter 22: Healthcare

Representation ID: 201073

Received: 17/10/2025

Respondent: Cambridge University Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust

Representation Summary:

Although we have no specific objections apart from a minor factual correction, we anticipate that the work on the Acute Care Strategy will underpin a new Estates Strategy and that new developments should make a fair and reasonable contribution to mitigating impacts on all NHS infrastructure – primary, acute, mental‑health and community.

Full text:

Cambridge University Hospital NHS Foundation Trust (CUH) has previously commented on the earlier consultation stages and most of our suggestions have been onboarded. We appreciate this is now a very advanced stage of the documents production and in this regard, we have sought to limit suggested changes to the document.

Rather, we wish to set out our position going forward there will be a need to update the position on mitigation of Healthcare impacts arising from development, as the new Local Plan moves forward having particular regard to the likely scale of anticipate, and the effects this will have on an already stretched NHS infrastructure in Cambridgeshire.


Comments on the SPD:

We welcome the positive approach to primary care provision in section 22 of the document, secured
through proactive engagement with colleagues at the ICS.

We have previously requested that the Planning Obligations SPD is left suitably flexible to allow
contributions to be sought for a broader spectrum of healthcare impacts. We note that the emphasis
remains on mitigating the effects on Primary Care, which is understandable at the current time. We
very much welcome the reference and acknowledgement at para 22.19 that growth may also give rise
to “For strategic scale proposals, there may be additional requirements for health infrastructure
related to acute, mental health and/or community health provision….”. This may not only be the case
for strategic sites, and we wish to explore how the health impacts of all development can be mitigated,
as cumulative pressure arising from small or medium sized developments makes a material difference
to our service provision.

We wish to maintain an open dialogue with our NHS partners across the Integrated Care System, and
with you as Local Authority, to ensure we secure the best possible outcomes for the healthcare system
when assessing and mitigating the impacts of future development, in particular with an eye on acute,
mental health and community health provision, and the pressures on the system arising from
population growth.

Acute Care Strategy - Update

To reinforce this, I wish to provide a brief overview of the work we have been doing to move this
agenda forward. As you will be aware from the letter I submitted in January 2025, CUH has used the
£3m allocated by the Ministry of Housing, Communities and Local Government (MHCLG) in 2024 to
develop a long-term plan for acute healthcare services on the Cambridge Biomedical Campus (CBC)
and surrounding areas, underpinned by a radical new acute care model.

Our vision is for CUH to operate in partnership across the health and care system to co-design a
Neighbourhood Health Service that supports people to stay well in their own communities. Specialist
input, diagnostics, urgent help and research participation will be available in neighbourhood hubs
and virtual settings, networked with the acute hospital. Attendance on the Cambridge Biomedical
Campus will only be for those with emergencies requiring stabilisation, or urgent needs which
cannot be met elsewhere.

By moving to more proactive, personalised care, we will reduce healthcare costs, improve outcomes
for our citizens, and demonstrate a new model of sustainable healthcare. Cambridge is uniquely
placed to develop and demonstrate the benefits of this new model. We have the innovation, scientific
and research partners and life sciences leadership to capitalise on our unique wealth of health data
and develop the AI driven predictive health tools for the wider NHS.

Implications for NHS Estate

Our new model of care is essential in managing the significant population growth planned locally in
the coming years, on top of the ca 18% growth in the past decade. Investment in infrastructure on
the campus is essential: our current Emergency Department (ED) was built for a quarter of the
patients it currently receives and over 70% of the Trust’s acute estate is classified as being in poor or
bad condition.

Implementing this new model of care will enable us to reduce the size of the new acute hospital
required on the CBC from over 2,000 beds to just over 1,000 beds (compared to our current acute
capacity of 850 beds). Alongside this essential new capacity on site, our model involves the
development of community Urgent and Emergency Care Hubs, networked into Neighbourhood
Health Centres, which enable patients to access more efficient, proactive acute care closer to home.
We will look to rationalise estate in some areas, be more efficient in sharing of property assets, and
of course, where significant growth is identified, seek to ensure appropriate additional provision in
high growth areas.

We are already implementing short to medium term work packages which can start to improve care
across the Cambridgeshire system today, while we continue to develop and implement the longer
term ambitions. Alongside this, we are seeking funding to progress this work to Outline Business Case
level, including developing a revamped Estates Strategy, a clear capital plan for CUH on-campus, and
supporting community proposals. We would be very happy to discuss further and to share the Acute
Care Strategy Interim Report, which has been shared with various parts of Government, including
DHSC, MHCLG, and the Cambridge Growth Company.

Feedback and Next Steps
We have not provided any specific comments on the document (save for one minor factual correction
at Appendix A), recognising that you have considered, and partially accepted the changes suggested
in our earlier representations, including the wider definition of health infrastructure.

We anticipate that work on the Acute Care Strategy will provide a sound platform for us to develop a
new Estates Strategy linked to the roll out of new models of care, and to apply and embed this having
regard to the planned growth of the area. Our ambition is to ensure that new developments make a
fair and reasonable contribution to mitigating impacts on critical NHS infrastructure across all
elements – primary, acute, mental health and community.

Appendix A – Proposed Minor Changes

Paragraph 22.10 – the bullet point referencing the hospitals within the ICS should be reworded to read
“Three Hospitals (Addenbrooke’s Hospital, the Rosie Maternity Hospital, Royal Papworth
Hospital)"

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