Government approves Regional Health Areas proposal

Health areas set to realign under new plan

The Government has approved the next steps for the implementation of Regional Health Areas (RHA), a plan that will see current health areas realigned.

Counties Cavan and Monaghan area currently part of CHO1, which also includes Sligo, Leitrim together with West Cavan, and Donegal. The decision taken will now facilitate the introduction of one population-based budget per region and a clearly identifiable head of health and social care per region

Minister for Health Stephen Donnelly TD says RHAs will plan, fund, manage and deliver integrated care for people in their region as geographically aligned, regional sub-divisions of the HSE.

They will also provide for the integration of hospital and community healthcare services, creating better access to services closer to home.

The government further states that the establishment of RHAs is “fundamental” to delivering Sláintecare reform and is in line with the Oireachtas Committee on the Future of Healthcare Sláintecare Report that regional bodies should be accountable for the planning and delivery of integrated health and social care services.

Commenting, Minister Donnelly said: “Regional Health Areas will ensure the alignment of hospital and community healthcare services at a regional level, based on defined populations and their local needs which delivers on the Sláintecare vision of an integrated health and social care service.”

He added that the implementation of Regional Health Areas and the introduction of population-based service planning are changes which will bring many benefits for both patients and staff. “Our health and social care workers have been heroic in their pandemic response, putting their own lives on the line to care for patients’ needs time and time again. They now need us to support and resource empowering reforms such as RHAs across the system to make their working lives easier and to maximise their efforts in the care of their patients.”

Leo Kearns, Chair of the Regional Health Areas Advisory Group remarked that as well as enabling the integration of community and acute care, RHAs aim to empower local decision-making and support population-based service planning. “RHAs will enable a devolved service delivery framework with a view to strengthening clear corporate and clinical governance. This will ultimately strengthen our health and social care service, leading to improved patient experience as well as access to healthcare closer to home.

“RHAs will have a “one budget, one system” approach, with improved accountability and governance, more equitable resource allocation, and strengthened clinical governance.”

Nominated leads have been already appointed from the HSE and the Department of Health to a joint RHA Implementation Team. This team has responsibility for drafting a detailed RHA implementation plan, and also includes representation from the Department of Children, Equality, Disability, Integration and Youth, in light of the transfer of policy responsibility for disability services.

The RHA implementation plan will include comprehensive and meaningful reform, communication, stakeholder engagement, and a focus on timely delivery that minimises disruption to services and direct costs.