MORE than £5m is needed for repairs to prevent “catastrophic failures” at two hospitals in a Teesside health trust.

New figures released show North Tees and Hartlepool Trust has £5.06m-worth of work needed to tackle their “high risk” maintenance backlog in 2018/19.

The Friarage Hospital in Northallerton also had a 'high risk' list adding up to £866,000.

These are defined as repairs and replacements that must be addressed as an urgent priority in order to prevent catastrophic failure, major disruption to clinical services – or deficiencies in safety liable to cause serious injury or prosecution.

Stockton’s University Hospital of North Tees saw £2.17m of “high risk” repairs needed while University Hospital of Hartlepool came in with a £2.89m backlog.

However, the figure is heading in the right direction with this sum down from 2017/18. 

Meanwhile, a further £6m was identified by both South Tees and North Tees trusts to clear their “significant risk” maintenance backlog.

While these are less serious problems than those categorised as “high risk”, they still need to be done as a priority to avoid risks to healthcare delivery or safety.

South Tees runs the Friarage Hospital, in Northallerton, which had a “high risk” list coming to £866,000 – while James Cook University Hospital had no maintenance backlog cost in any category. 

A spokeswoman for North Tees and Hartlepool Trust said the cost of repairs due was heading down. 

He added: “Our current maintenance backlog for our overall backlog has decreased significantly in the last year from £49m to just under £40m. We have invested in a robust infrastructure replacement to ensure we address driving down the back-log. 

“We have a five year programme to address these issues. 

“The backlog maintenance is being managed down in a risk-based approach manner.”

South Tees had reduced its backlog by £1m last year.