Liverpool has had unstable administrative arrangements with the North West region, and in particular with Manchester since the establishment of the NHS. In 1946 drawing the boundary between the Liverpool and Manchester
regional hospital boards proved to be particularly difficult because of "the jealousy felt by Liverpool for Manchester and the reluctance of Preston to consider any scheme centred on Liverpool or Manchester."
NHS North West was established as a
strategic health authority in 2006. It had oversight of 24
primary care trusts, 23
acute trusts, 8
mental health trusts, 7 specialist trusts, as well as the
North West Ambulance Service. In October 2011 NHS North West, alongside NHS Yorkshire and Humberside and
NHS North East became a part of the NHS North of England SHA cluster – a temporary administrative merger to manage the North of England health economy until the planned dissolution of SHAs in March 2013. The authority closed on 31 March 2013 as part of the
Health and Social Care Act 2012.
Sustainability and transformation plan The
Liverpool City Region submitted proposals for greater local control of the NHS and social care in 2015 following developments in Manchester. Cheshire and Merseyside formed a
sustainability and transformation plan area in March 2016 with Louise Shepherd, the chief executive of
Alder Hey Children's NHS Foundation Trust as its leader Plans to merge the four clinical commissioning groups in north Merseyside were rejected by
NHS England in September 2020 because they insisted on a single commissioning body for the entire Cheshire and Merseyside system. In October 2021
John Ashton was shortlisted for the position of chair of the Cheshire and Merseyside
Integrated Care System. Although he was the highest scoring candidate the board decided not to appoint anyone.
David Flory was to continue as interim chair. ==Commissioning==