HHFT employs approximately 6,000 staff. As an NHS Foundation Trust, HHFT is accountable to the public through a Council of Governors elected by members of the Trust. Anyone can become a member of a Foundation Trust for free. In 2013 the trust established a subsidiary company, Hampshire Hospitals Contract Services Limited, to which 5 estates and facilities staff were transferred. The intention was to achieve VAT benefits, as well as pay bill savings, by recruiting new staff on less expensive non-NHS contracts. VAT benefits arise because NHS trusts can only claim VAT back on a small subset of goods and services they buy. The Value Added Tax Act 1994 provides a mechanism through which NHS trusts can qualify for refunds on contracted out services. The trust's chief medical officer as of September 2019 is Dr. Lara Alloway, the chief nurse as of September 2018 is Julie Dawes. The chief financial officer is Malcolm Ace, and the chief operating officer is Julie Maskery. The Trust's clinical services are organised into three divisions: surgical services, medical services and Family and Clinical Support Service. Each division is led by a medical director who is supported by an operations director.
Surgical services
The Surgical Services division is led by Mr Christian Wakefield with Suzanne Wills as the operations director. The sub-specialties of Surgical services are:
The Family and Clinical Support Services division is led by Dr Nicki Hutchinson with Diane Blanchard as the operations director. The sub-specialties of Family and Clinical Support Services are:
Like many NHS hospitals the Trust has had difficulty in meeting the national target in its emergency department which has seen a rise of nearly 8% in patient numbers in 2014. In the year 2015/2016, HHFT failed this target which aims to see 95% of patients admitted to A&E discharged or admitted within 4 hours. The trust spent £4 million on agency staff in 2014/15.
Development
In 2014, the Trust announced plans for a new Critical Treatment Hospital to be built alongside a new £18.5m cancer treatment centre, on land at North Waltham, Hampshire. It would have a centralised obstetric labour unit and midwifery-led birthing centre, paediatric ward, central pathology laboratory, ambulance station, energy centre and a helicopter landing pad. The total cost of delivering the hospital was expected to be £150 million, of which £120 million was the cost of building. The project was halted by the local Clinical commissioning groups in November 2017 citing concerns that it was not affordable. In December 2017, plans were announced for the building of the Winchester Hospice. This would be a 10 bedded hospice based in Winchester.