Work on new GP surgery 'could begin by Christmas'
- Published
An NHS boss said he hoped to see "spades in the ground" on a new GP surgery by Christmas.
Ed Garrett, chief executive of the NHS Suffolk and North East Essex Integrated Care Board (ICB), said plans for an "additional estate" in Ipswich were being explored.
He told the BBC the new complex would be delivered for patients of Cardinal Medical Practice.
"You're thinking along the right lines," he said, when pressed on whether the NHS would buy and convert an existing building into a new health centre.
"We've got to get through the various stages we need to get through, but I want to see spades in the ground by Christmas this year."
Mr Garrett was speaking after residents were left aggrieved by the decision to no longer build a so-called "super surgery" at the former Tooks Bakery site in the north-west of the town.
"I want to issue a sincere apologise to the people of north Ipswich but we are determined to deliver a Plan B and are moving forward," he added.
Patrick Spencer, Conservative MP for Central Suffolk and North Ipswich, told the BBC Ipswich could have a new surgery soon, but moved to manage the expectations of constituents.
"I can't sit here and guarantee the ideal outcome will be delivered when we want it to be delivered but I will do absolutely everything I can," he said.
"We have a plan in place to ensure we solve this problem and I promise that I am on it – it is the most important thing going on."
That sentiment was echoed by residents including Barbara Bedford, who was left "very disappointed" by the decision to shelve plans for the multimillion-pound surgery.
"I have been struggling for a long time [to get appointments] and that would have helped so many people – it's sad, it really is sad," she said.
Lucky Singh, 60, was worried that building extra homes in the area would increase pressure on local GP services.
"The system is broken but we are building all these new houses and we have no surgeries, so where are they going to go?," he said.
"North-west Ipswich is already at breaking point and somewhere down the line it is going to break."
Sam Murray, Conservative Ipswich borough councillor for Castle Hill and Suffolk county councillor for Whitehouse and Whitton, said: "We are seeing large housing developments on the outskirts and we already don't have the infrastructure.
"There's only so much the residents of Ipswich as a whole can take and this really needs to be considered.
"The health of our residents has to come first."
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