University Hospitals Plymouth NHS Trust is runs Derriford Hospital, the Royal Eye Infirmary since 2013 and Plymouth's Child Development centre. It also manages community midwifery services in Plymouth, runs clinics, and manages the Peninsula Radiology Academy. It had planned to integrate with Livewell Southwest, a local social enterprise providing integrated health and social care services which was set up as a community interest company in 2011 as part of the Transforming Community Services initiative, however this integration was quietly cancelled following the discovery that continuing the integration would have been illegal. In October 2018 it decided to move all its non-urgent orthopaedic surgery, about 200 cases a month, to the nearby Peninsula Treatment Centre, which is run by Care UK, in order to free up space at Derriford Hospital during the winter. In the winter of 2017 it was forced to fill an orthopaedic ward with medical emergency patients. The operations will still be conducted by the Trust's staff. The trust does not have an alongside midwifery led unit as recommended by the National Institute for Health and Care Excellence. It only offers services at patients’ homes and on its labour ward.
Performance
The Trust has recorded a financial deficit each year since 2010 and expects to continue to do so for the next five years. The trust cancelled 648 operations at the last minute for non-clinical reasons between January and March 2015 - the highest number of any trust in England. The trust has an arrangement with BMI Healthcare for cardiac surgery performed by the trust’s own surgeons at the London Independent Hospital. This is mainly valve replacements and coronary artery bypass grafts. Patients usually spend 5–8 days in hospital and are admitted the night before to take account of travelling. The Northern, Eastern and Western DevonClinical Commissioning Group gave the trust a £2.4 million advance payment in November 2015 to help its cash balance. In February 2016 it was expecting a deficit of £36 million for the year. According to the British Orthopaedic Association the Peninsula Trauma Centre at Derriford was the best in the country in 2016 for treating open fractures. In the winter of 2019-20 the trust had severe problems in the A&E department with waiting times reaching 8 hours repeatedly and the trust declaring an OPEL Level 4 major crisis.