Healthcare in Cambridgeshire

From 1947 to 1965, NHS services in Cambridgeshire were managed by the East Anglian Regional Hospital Board.

[2] The National Audit Office undertook an investigation into the collapse of the contract, which was published in July 2016.

[3] Cambridgeshire and Peterborough health and social care commissioners and providers developed a sustainability and transformation plan in March 2016 with Dr Neil Modha, the Chief Clinical Officer of Cambridgeshire and Peterborough Clinical Commissioning Group as its leader[4] Cambridgeshire and Peterborough Clinical Commissioning Group's problems were said by PricewaterhouseCoopers to be "among the broadest and deepest set of issues facing any CCG we have worked with" in June 2018 after it finished 2017–18 with a £42 million deficit.

[citation needed] In 2017 the CCG decided to suspend NHS-funded in vitro fertilisation (IVF) fertility services indefinitely.

[9] In July 2021, the CCG decided to reinstate the service, providing one cycle of IVF to women under the age of 40.

[14] In March 2018 Cambridgeshire County Council announced an exploratory deal with CareRooms which would involve low acuity self funding patients.

Homeowners would be paid £50 a night to accommodate patients leaving hospital and the company would provide any necessary equipment.

[16] Chief executive Paul Gaudin claimed the environment would be much safer than the current facilities that patients are often discharged into.