The Llandudno Hospital Action Group says the march will reflect concerns for hospital care across north Wales |
It follows a decision by the area community health council (CHC) not to refer Betsi Cadwaladr University Health Board plans to the Welsh government.
Serious neonatal baby care will move to England, and a number of community hospitals will close.
The health board says it has made hard decisions but has a responsibility to provide safe and sustainable care.
One member of the CHC has announced he is resigning in protest at the moves.
Gwynedd councillor Huw Edwards said he had lost faith in the Betsi Cadwaladr CHC, which acts as a patient watchdog.
"I believe that the health council has behaved contrary to public opinion and also to their own plans," he said.
"There are no details at all about provision in the community that the board refers to and that is totally unfair to the areas that will lose their local hospitals.
"The decision to move the specialist neonatal unit from Glan Clwyd is equally despicable."
Cuts and closures
Under proposals agreed by the health board, the most serious cases of intensive baby care will move from Glan Clwyd hospital at Bodelwyddan in Denbighshire to Arrowe Park Hospital in Wirral, Merseyside.
Community hospitals in Flint, Blaenau Ffestiniog, Llangollen and Prestatyn would close, with minor injury units also shutting at Llangollen, Chirk, Flint, Ruthin and Colwyn Bay.
On Thursday, the CHC said it would not be referring the majority of the proposals to the Health Minister Lesley Griffith.
However, campaigners have vowed to fight on against the planned changes.
"Emotions are running very high. People are very angry and they are also frightened. Frightened that our health service here in north Wales just can't cope and yet we are being asked to accept even more cuts," explained Carol Marubbi, who is helping organize the march in Llandudno on Saturday.
As vice-chair of the Llandudno Hospital Action Group, she remains increasingly concerned about the future of the town's hospital even though it has been left relatively unscathed in the reorganization plans.
Breast care
But changes to the way junior doctors are now trained across Britain mean the Llandudno unit has been hit in other ways.
The hospital can no longer provide night cover for breast surgery patients, which means that any patient needing treatment that may require an overnight stay must be admitted to another hospital, such as Glan Clwyd.
Earlier in the week Conwy council voiced its opposition to the current hospital plans by passing a motion of no confidence in the health board.
Linda Groom, chair of the Llandudno action group, added: "I think the health board has underestimated how much anger there is out there and we're hoping a mass protest will bring this home to them."
A spokesperson for the health board said that it recognised that there are strong views over the reorganization plans.
"These have been very hard decisions for the board to make, but we have a responsibility to provide safe and sustainable healthcare services for the people we serve and this is why change is needed," said the spokesperson.
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BBC
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