From 1 July 2022, Clinical Commissioning Groups (CCGs) will be dissolved, and Integrated Care Boards (ICBs) will take over the responsibility for NHS functions and budgets. We will become part of NHS Humber and North Yorkshire ICB. You can continue to use this website to find the information you need, which remains relevant for the Hull area.

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Junior doctors are due to begin 72 hours of industrial action this week.

Members of the BMA and HCSA unions will go on strike from 7am on Wednesday 14 June 2023, and the industrial action will end at 7am on Saturday 17 June.

Junior doctors are qualified doctors who have anywhere up to eight years’ experience working in hospitals. Junior doctors account for half of all doctors in the NHS, and they play a key role in the day-to-day running of hospital services and specialties.

Professor Makani Purva, Chief Medical Officer for Hull University Teaching Hospitals NHS Trust – which runs Hull Royal Infirmary and Castle Hill Hospital in Cottingham – says:

“During the junior doctor strikes of March and April, around four in every five of our junior doctors who were due to work – that’s several hundred staff – took part in industrial action each day.

“Planning has been underway for some time to mitigate the impact of next week’s industrial action, but inevitably the loss of several hundred members of our workforce over several days will have a knock-on effect for both our patients and our services.

“Allied health professionals, specialist nursing staff, advanced practitioners and consultants will once again be stepping in to provide cover and ensure essential services are maintained, but regrettably this does mean some routine, non-urgent work will need to be rearranged.”

Patients with appointments scheduled to take place on either 14th, 15th or 16th June are asked to attend as planned. In those cases where appointments need to be rearranged or changes made, a member of staff will be in touch with patients directly to discuss.

Professor Purva continues:

“The junior doctors’ action will add more pressure to already busy hospital services, including our Emergency Department, so we’d really urge the public to choose wisely and use the healthcare service most suited to their needs if they require medical help over the strike period.”

Patients arriving at Hull Royal Infirmary’s emergency department with non-urgent health needs during the strike period may be invited to seek treatment elsewhere as staff seek to juggle service demands and keep patients safe.  Anyone who chooses to stay in the department is expected to face significantly lengthy waits.

Medical advice is always available, 24hrs per day, through NHS111 online at 111.nhs.uk or by calling 111, free of charge.

A list of local pharmacies can be found on the NHS website, while walk-in care and treatment for minor injuries is available from the following centres across Hull and East Yorkshire, all of which are open late into the evening or round-the-clock:

  • Hull – Story Street walk-in centre
  • Bransholme – Urgent Treatment Centre within Bransholme Health Centre, Goodhart Road (open 24hrs)
  • Beverley – Urgent Treatment Centre within East Riding Community Hospital, Swinemoor Lane
  • Goole – Urgent Treatment Centre within Goole & District Hospital, Woodland Avenue
  • Bridlington – Urgent Treatment Centre within Bridlington Hospital (Entrance A), Bessingby Road
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