See how you could help save nine lives

Communications TeamNews

Organ donation is the gift of an organ to help someone who needs a transplant. Thousands of lives in the UK are saved or transformed each year by organ transplants.

Organs that can be donated by people who have died include heart, lungs, kidneys, pancreas, liver and small bowel.

Tissue such as skin, bone and heart valves can also be used to save and improve people’s lives, and corneas can help to restore people’s sight.

If you want to become a donor after you die you could save and improve the lives of up to nine people through organ donation and even more if you also donate tissue.

Organ donation remains your choice.

Every day in the UK, someone dies waiting for an organ transplant, because there just aren’t enough organ donors.

There are currently more than 7000 people waiting for an organ transplant in the UK, and while more people from Black, Asian and minority ethnic backgrounds are receiving transplants than ever before, Black and Asian patients still wait longer than White patients for a transplant.

People can receive a transplant from someone of any ethnicity, however the most suitable match is likely to come from a donor of the same ethnicity.

You can choose to donate some or all of your organs and tissue, or you can choose not to donate. You can amend or withdraw a registration at any time. If there is no recorded decision for you, in England, Wales and Scotland this means your consent may be deemed, due to the organ donation laws in those countries.

Families will always be involved before organ donation goes ahead so it’s important that you talk with them about organ donation and whether you’d want to be a donor. Your family will be expected to support your decision.

If you don’t have family, or your relationship is difficult, you can also nominate a representative. This might be a friend, GP, faith leader or someone else of your choice.

The best way to make your decision known is to record it on the NHS Organ Donor Register and tell your loved ones. You can do that via our website, or via the NHS app in England, or by calling 0300 123 23 23. There are tips on the organ donation website which could help start the conversation with your family.

Bank Holiday arrangements, Monday 19 September

Communications TeamNews

Windows at Hull Royal Infirmary reflecting the sun

Hull University Teaching Hospitals NHS Trust has been reviewing arrangements for patient services following the announcement of Monday 19 September as a Bank Holiday.

The Trust and the clinical teams have worked together to enable as much planned activity as possible to proceed on the Bank Holiday and can confirm that around two thirds of all planned surgical procedures which have been scheduled for this date, including the most urgent operations and cancer cases, will go ahead as planned.

Unfortunately, some routine procedures have been postponed, albeit a relatively small number. We apologise to those patients affected and will seek to reschedule as soon as possible.

Our outpatient services have been more heavily impacted; with around 6 in every 10 appointments postponed, however thanks to the support of our clinical teams we will still provide over 1,000 outpatient appointments on Monday as planned.

As the picture varies across different departments and services, the Trust is now in the process of contacting all patients with an appointment or procedure scheduled for Monday to either confirm it is going ahead or to cancel and reschedule.

Ellen Ryabov, Chief Operating Officer for Hull University Teaching Hospitals NHS Trust says:

“We understand some patients will be disappointed to hear their appointments have been postponed. In making our decisions, we’ve had to consider a number of different factors including safe staffing levels, the potential for patients not to attend because they wish to observe the funeral themselves, and the desire among many of our own staff to observe the occasion and pay their respects to our late Queen on the day of the funeral.

“Other factors outside of our control, such as reduced public transport services and closure of community venues where we would ordinarily deliver clinics have also been considered.

“We are therefore making every effort to ensure priority surgeries and urgent appointments continue as planned, including cancer cases, diagnostics and radiotherapy treatments, but many other clinics and some non-urgent procedures are being rescheduled.

“We are now in the process of contacting everyone who is scheduled for an appointment or procedure on Monday to advise whether it needs to be rescheduled or whether it will go ahead. We would ask patients for their patience and understanding as we work through a high volume of appointments and calls, but please be assured we will be in contact.”

Urgent Treatment Centres and NHS111 will be open throughout the Bank Holiday period for those with medical problems of a routine, non-life threatening nature – call 111 or visit 111.nhs.uk for advice or details of your nearest centre.

Hull Hospitals to host international chest injury conference

Communications TeamNews

Helicopter on helipad in front of Hull Royal Infirmary

Health professionals from across the globe will descend on East Yorkshire tomorrow as a team from Hull Hospitals plays host to a prestigious clinical event.

The major trauma team from Hull University Teaching Hospitals NHS Trust will host the Chest Wall Injury Society (CWIS) Modern Management of Chest Wall Injury conference tomorrow, Tuesday 6 September, at the Mercure Grange Park Hotel in Willerby.

The honour of hosting the conference comes just weeks after the Trust’s thoracic trauma team was awarded CWIS ‘Collaborative Centre’ status in recognition of its often life-saving work with patients with rib fractures and other chest injuries.

The conference will welcome both UK and international delegates, online and in person, and will explore hot topics, research, and examine challenging cases in the rapidly evolving field of rib and sternal repair through presentations, interactive discussion and shared expertise.

Major Trauma clinical lead, Dr Tom Cowlam

Major trauma clinical lead, Dr Tom Cowlam

In advance of the course, the CWIS’s SarahAnn Whitbeck and Dr Thomas W. White have travelled from the US and been hosted at Hull Royal Infirmary today by a team including Chief Executive Christopher Long, who will open tomorrow’s conference, plus major trauma clinical lead Dr Tom Cowlam and thoracic surgeons Mr Michael Cowen and Mr Michael Gooseman.

Mr Gooseman, who is also a senior clinical lecturer with Hull York Medical School, says the event is a real feather in Hull’s clinical cap:

“This is a proud moment for us in our ongoing relationship as a CWIS Collaborative Centre.

“We’re thrilled to be welcoming the Chest Wall Injury Society to Hull for this prestigious educational event. It promises to be a cutting-edge exploration of current operative and non-operative approaches to chest wall trauma, taking the experience and most recent learning from experts in the field and sharing this far and wide.

“Chest wall injuries are usually sustained as a result of moderate or major trauma, so something like a fall or a crush injury. Though not uncommon, it’s important that these injuries are managed correctly as they can lead to significant health risks for patients such as compromised breathing or further complications.

“Tomorrow’s event is a meeting of health professionals first and foremost, but what we’re all aiming to do is bring learning back to the workplace and use it to benefit the patients we all care for.

“Being able to host some of the leading names in chest trauma right here in Hull not only means we have direct access to their expertise, but it also means we can showcase the work of our own team on a global stage and show just why Hull has earned its Collaborative Centre status.”

More information and an agenda for the conference can be found on the CWIS website.

New hospital car parking arrangements

Communications TeamNews

Cars in Argyle Street hospital car park on a sunny day

Our main Hull Royal Infirmary car park on Argyle Street, and all of our patient and visitor car parks at Castle Hill Hospital, now use Automatic Number Plate Recognition (ANPR).

  • A camera will read your number plate as you drive into our car park.
  • You will need to “pay on exit” before returning to your car.
  • When you reach the exit, the barrier will lift as long as you have paid.

Some of our car parks at Hull Royal Infirmary are still pay-and-display, so please check the signs in the car parks.

Charges

  • £2.00 for up to 1 hour
  • £3.00 for 1 to 2 hours
  • £5.00 for 2 to 24 hours

If you have any questions, please speak to a member of car parking or security staff.

Car Park Maps

Our maps have been updated to show you the locations of the different car parks at both hospitals.

Free Parking

The following groups of patients and visitors are entitled to free parking.

Blue Badge holders

  • Parking is free for Blue Badge holders.
  • You must display a valid Blue Badge in your vehicle.
  • You must register your Blue Badge on the APCOA Blue Badge Permit Portal ideally before you come to hospital. You can add multiple vehicle registrations via the app if necessary.
  • If you arrive at hospital before registering your Blue Badge, you can validate your free parking using the tablets at the security offices or the Queen’s Centre.

Parents of children staying in hospital overnight

  • Your parking is free if your child has to stay overnight in hospital.
  • Please speak to the ward team caring for your child, who will validate your parking.

Regular outpatients attenders

  • Your parking is free if you have to attend outpatients regularly.

Please speak to the reception staff in your outpatients department, who will validate your parking.

 

Short-Term Parking Permits

If you are going to be attending hospital regularly for a short period of time, you can save money by purchasing an unlimited parking permit, with the following charges:

  • £10.00 for a week
  • £15.00 for two weeks
  • £20.00 for a month

You must ask for a form from the ward or department you are visiting, then take it to the Security Office at either of our hospitals.

 

Electric Vehicles

Electric vehicle parking is not included in the charging fee and should be paid for at the parking payment machines or on the app.

For more information on EV charging, please refer to the EV charging signage.

 

Security Offices

  • Hull Royal Infirmary
    3rd Floor Tower Block
    Tel: 01482 675257
  • Castle Hill Hospital
    Main Reception
    01482 623723

 

Effective from Monday 15 August 2022.

Changes to hospital car parking from 15 August

Communications TeamNews

Cars in Argyle Street hospital car park on a sunny day

We recently updated our car parking payment machines at Hull Royal Infirmary and Castle Hill Hospital to allow hospital users to pay using cash card, contactless, online via the APCOA app and with cash.

From Monday 15th August, the machines will be linked to an Automatic Number Plate Recognition system so all you need to do when you arrive at one of our hospitals is park up and go to your appointment. Before you leave site, please visit one of our payment machines, type in your registration number, and pay for your parking. There’s no need to pay in advance, and no need to display a ticket.

Automatic Number Plate Recognition (ANPR) works by constantly searching a ‘read zone’ for vehicle registration numbers. Once a registration number is recognised by the camera it will start a parking episode. The ANPR system will log the entry time to the site, or individual car park, for the purpose of working out the charges when the vehicle leaves. If you are not a Disabled Blue Badge holder, please make a payment before moving to the barrier.

Patients or visitors who hold a valid Disabled Blue Badge issued by the local authority will be permitted to park for free however to ensure that you benefit from this free parking, you are required to register your vehicle on the National APCOA Portal at https://bluebadge.apcoa.co.uk/

If you hold a valid Disabled Blue Badge and you are coming on to one of our sites for the first time you can go to the Security Office to register your vehicle and have it safe-listed. If you find that all accessible parking bays are full, or if it is more convenient to you, you can park in any patient/visitor parking bays, and still benefit from free parking, provided you’ve registered the vehicle. Please note though that we do not permit parking on double yellow lines, double red lines or hatchings, even with a valid Disabled Blue Badge issued by the local authority.

Car parking at the Queen’s Centre will continue to be free for cancer patients, however you will be required to enter your registration number on a tablet within the Queen’s Centre upon arrival to validate your parking.

Very short stays, such as to drop someone off or to pick someone up (including taxis) will also be free, however if you know you will be waiting a while, please park in a relevant bay and pay on exit as per the above instructions to enable drop off bays to remain free for others to use.

 

Hull makes awards shortlist for its work to reduce carbon emissions

Communications TeamNews

Zero30 graphic featuring trees, foliage and the HRI tower block

Hull Hospitals are in the running for a prestigious national award based on their efforts to reduce carbon emissions and promote sustainability.

Car park lines showing where an electric vehicle can be charged

Hull University Teaching Hospitals NHS Trust is one of nine organisations to be shortlisted this week in the ‘Towards Net Zero’ category of the Health Service Journal Awards 2022.

The Trust has made a bold commitment to achieve net zero by 2030, seeking to become carbon neutral up to 15 years earlier than the targets set by the Department of Health*.

The Trust has already made some significant progress towards this aim, such as the replacement of its gas boilers with heat pumps, replacement of some 20,000 traditional light fittings with low energy versions, a reduction in the use of gases such as Entonox, and the creation of Castle Hill Hospital’s ‘Field of Dreams’; an 11,000 panel solar farm which currently generates enough power to meet the daytime needs of the entire hospital site.

Eye Hospital staff member adding content to a Zero30 notice board

Marc Beaumont, Head of Sustainability for the Trust says:

“It’s great to be recognised for the work we’ve been doing but our achievements are not just down to a few, they’re the result of all staff pulling together to do their bit, so I’d like to thank everyone whose actions are helping to bring the ultimate goal of carbon neutrality that little bit closer every day.”

The Trust’s Sustainability Team must present its case to the HSJ judging panel in October, before winners are revealed at a special awards ceremony in mid November.

You can help Hull Hospitals make a difference by submitting your own Zero30 pledge via the Trust website.

 

* Current NHS guidance asks all NHS organisations to become net zero in respect of the carbon emissions they directly control by 2040, and those they can influence by 2045. Hull University Teaching Hospitals NHS Trust is aiming to become one of the first hospital trusts in England to reach zero carbon emissions by 2030.

 

New park-and-ride services to help staff get to Hull’s hospitals

Communications TeamNews

Staff working at Hull’s Hospitals are now able to catch free buses to work as part of a plan to tackle climate change.

Hull University Teaching Hospitals NHS Trust is working with East Yorkshire Buses, Asda and Morrison’s to establish three new park-and-ride services for staff working at Hull Royal Infirmary and Castle Hill Hospital.

Staff working at Castle Hill Hospital can catch the 25 service anywhere along the route from Hornsea to the hospital, including Leven, Brandesburton, Tickton and Beverley, for free. Staff can also park their cars at Morrison’s in Beverley to catch the 25 to work.

Two more services have been introduced using the 56 and 57 buses from East Hull, with staff able to park their cars at Asda Bilton or Morrison’s on Holderness Road before catching the bus to Hull Royal Infirmary. They can also catch the bus anywhere along the route and travel for free, just by showing their ID badges.

More than 500 car journeys have been saved in the first three weeks of the scheme.

Duncan Taylor, Director of Estates, Facilities and Development, said the new schemes were part of HUTH’s Zero Thirty campaign to reduce its carbon footprint to zero by 2030 and support staff with the cost of living.

He said:  “We all have to move away from our over-reliance on cars if we are to stand a chance of tackling climate change and the recent soaring temperatures have focused people’s minds on the need for every one of us to take action.

“We would never be able to satisfy the demand for enough car parking spaces at either of our hospitals but more spaces are not the answer. As the largest employer in the city, we take our responsibility to reduce pollution and the risk of future flooding very seriously.

“These new park-and-rides and free bus services offer staff living in these areas a viable alternative of getting to work. Not only will they avoid car parking charges, the rising cost of fuel and associated wear and tear on their cars, they’ll also be able to travel on the bus for free while playing their part in tackling climate change.

“We’re really grateful to Asda and Morrison’s, as well as East Yorkshire Buses, for their support which is allowing our staff to leave their cars at home completely or for at least part of the way.”

HUTH will be reintroducing car parking charges shortly after the Department of Health and Social Care withdrew funding introduced during the initial waves of the pandemic.

It launched a Getting to Work programme in June to help staff come up with options for travelling to work instead of bringing their cars, including walking, cycling, running and using public transport. Staff have been able to attend a range of activities including free bike maintenance days, “try before you buy” bike trials and events with East Riding Council, Hull City Council, Safer Roads Humber and Humberside Police to promote safe active travel.

The new park-and-ride services are in addition to the existing park-and-ride express service from Priory Park for those living and travelling to Hull Royal Infirmary from the west of the city. HUTH staff in West Hull are also able to travel for free on the 154 and 63 services between Hull Royal Infirmary and Castle Hill Hospital.

Staff who don’t live on or near the routes of the new and existing park-and-ride bus services can still benefit from discounted bus fares through a Smart Commute card and can also spread the cost of a rail season ticket over 12 months.

HUTH is also running a free park-and-ride shuttle from the Mercure Hotel in Willerby to Castle Hill, helping staff avoid the stress of finding a parking space while freeing up more spaces for patients. It also has a Cycle to Work scheme to help staff spread the cost of a new bike over one, two or three years.

 

 

Your Birthing Choices…

Communications TeamNews

Cartoon of woman on birthing ball with partner and midwife alongside

We asked women and birthing people across Humber and North Yorkshire what was important to them when choosing where to give birth

Across Humber and North Yorkshire, the NHS and local partners are looking at ways to improve healthcare in our region.

Last year, as we started to consider how maternity and neonatal care could be delivered in the future, we launched a survey to hear from new and expectant mothers, women trying to conceive, surrogates, other birthing people, and their families about what matters to them when accessing maternity services.

Home birth graphic

Working collaboratively with Maternity Voice Partnerships (MVPs) across the region an engagement exercise called Your Birthing Choices was co-produced to help us better understand what environment people would prefer to give birth in, what influences their decisions on where to give birth, what their main concerns are and what could be put in place to alleviate those concerns.

An incredible 1,136 people participated and shared their views, through either an online survey or by attending a focus group. You can read what they had to say.

  • Overall, an Alongside Midwifery-Led Unit was participants’ preferred place to give birth, but not everyone’s first choice.
  • At Home and at a Standalone Midwifery Led Unit were participants’ least preferred locations to give birth at due to concerns around safety should complications arise during labour.
  • Not having neonatal care available would influence where many participants choose to give birth
  • Being kept safe and well looked after was comparatively more important to maternity service-users than the public as a whole

We would like to take this opportunity to thank everyone who took the time to respond, your feedback has been invaluable.

Read the Your Birthing Choices engagement report and the findings. 

Honorary degree for professor with a passion for physics and rock music

Communications TeamNews

Professor Andy Beavis in his ceremonial robes holding his award

A passion for guitar is not the only thing Hull Hospitals’ Professor Andy Beavis has in common with Queen’s Brian May.

The consultant medical physicist and the legendary rocker were both presented with honorary degrees by the University of Hull this month.

A former pupil at Longcroft School in Beverley, Professor Beavis was put forward for the Degree of Doctor of Science, honoris causa, by the University of Hull’s Dr David Richards.

Dr Richards’ nomination described how Andy has excelled throughout his career after discovering his passion and abilities in both physics and maths at a young age.

After gaining his degree in radiation physics from Newcastle and periodically serving as a roadie for space rock band, Hawkwind, Andy joined Hull University Teaching Hospitals NHS Trust as a clinical scientist in 1992. He progressed through the ranks and eventually took on the role of Head of Radiation Physics at Castle Hill Hospital in 2007.

During this time, he developed the use of Magnetic Resonance Imaging in radiotherapy, a significant step forward in radiotherapy treatment planning from the standard x-ray CT technique, and created an algorithm for new treatment techniques called Dynamic Wedges, something which had stumped other industry experts at the time. These techniques were quickly adopted in cancer treatment and Andy started to become noticed on the world stage.

At the same time, he joined the National Radiotherapy Programme Board, influencing national policy, playing a key role in the future direction of radiotherapy treatment, and helping to establish a £23m Radiotherapy Innovation Fund to modernise radiotherapy throughout the UK.

2007 was also the year when Andy became co-founder and Chief Scientific Officer of Vertual Ltd, a spin off enterprise with colleagues from the University of Hull which uses virtual reality (VR) to train radiotherapy professionals.

Described as being like a ‘flight simulator for radiotherapy’, every radiographer delivering therapy in the UK after 2007 has been trained using Vertual’s VR simulation system. The system is now in over 160 installations in over 30 countries around the world, helping to shape how care is delivered to millions of people with cancer.

Dr Richards says:

“Andy is someone who has always strived to deliver more, whether that’s clinical care for his patients, advances in technology for his colleagues, or shaping the direction of his profession and radiotherapy treatment across the globe.

“He’s been published over a hundred times, he’s received multiple awards, and he’s been listed in the top 100 Leading Practicing Scientists in the UK.  It makes us all really proud when we consider just how far Andy’s work has reached and how many lives it has touched for the better. He very much deserves the honorary degree given to him this month”.

Now Head of Medical Physics at the Trust, leading a team of nearly 100 scientists, engineers and support staff, Andy is an internationally recognised expert who continues to fly the flag for Hull when it comes to research, innovation and improving patient care.

Andy says he’s thrilled to have received the doctorate from the university:

“In academic circles, it’s considered a great honour to receive such an honorary degree and I am truly grateful to the University for the award.

“Across the Medical Physics service in Hull, we have achieved so much in radiotherapy, diagnostic imaging, nuclear medicine and clinical engineering, and I am very proud of the fantastic team that I have the pleasure to lead.

“The work we have done in developing novel training methods with Vertual has been very exciting, especially reflecting a Hull-based company growing from the Trust and University which has changed international practice in clinical training forever.

“I hope that this award might help promote the opportunities that the NHS offers to scientists, engineers and technologists. It would be fantastic if we could interest local people to explore the type of career that I have been fortunate to enjoy so much.”

Andy hasn’t forgotten his rock roots either, having taken another ride on the ‘Starship Hawkwind’ in Tokyo, Japan, in 2015.

Solar farm meets traditional farming

Communications TeamNews

Sheep grazing among solar panels

Castle Hill won’t let the grass grow as 51 sheep are welcomed onto solar field

There’s a lot to think about when you set out to build a multi-million pound solar farm; how best to capture the sun? How much power will it generate? Are all the permissions in place?  But one question that may not immediately spring to mind is how to cut the grass.

Sheep grazing in the sunshine among the solar panels

Sheep among the solar panels, opposite Castle Hill Hospital

This was the dilemma facing the team at Hull University Teaching Hospitals NHS Trust and its 11,000 panel ‘field of dreams’ opposite Castle Hill Hospital in Cottingham.

Now thanks to a local shepherding family, they’ve come up with the ultimate, sustainable green solution; a flock of 51 hungry sheep.

“The idea came about by chance, after we started looking at ways of cutting the grass between the rows of solar panels,” says Alex Best, Head of Capital for the Trust.

“We approached a number of landscapers for ideas on how we could manage the grass cutting, both mechanically and sustainably, and this felt like the perfect solution; keeping the grass down naturally and reducing our carbon footprint. It ties in perfectly with our ethos of sustainability and supporting our local community, and the costs involved are extremely competitive at just one sixth of what it would cost us to cut the grass mechanically.

Curly haired sheep looking directly at the camera

“We intended the field to become an area of natural biodiversity, and the natural approach to maintaining the land we’re now taking only enhances this.”

A total of 51 sheep of varying breeds including Beltex and Blue Texel are now happily munching away in Field A, which lies adjacent to Castle Road and the A164. The flock is helping to control the growth of grasses and other wildflowers sown on the field when construction finished in February this year.

Grant Bailey and his brother Ollie, both from Cottingham (pictured below), helped to bring the family’s sheep up to their new stomping ground. Grant, who runs GMB Mini Tool Hire, also maintains the lower field (Field B) on behalf of the Trust.

Ollie and Grant Bailey standing with a sheep in solar field

Grant Bailey (right) and his brother Ollie in the solar field with their sheep

Grant says:

“We needed somewhere for our sheep to go and within a couple of days of chatting to Alex, we were talking about how we could make it work.

“We knew of the solar field but hadn’t actually thought about it as an option. Now the sheep are here, they seem really happy and it’s great to have found a solution to both our needs without having to have looked outside the village.”

Grant and Ollie check on the sheep twice a day to make sure they’re all okay.

The sheep are secured within the field with plenty of space to roam, while 21 rows of solar panels and the surrounding trees provide plenty of shade to cool down when the weather gets hot.

And there’s no risk of supply cables being nibbled either; the panels are mounted high enough to be out of reach of curious faces and the cables are protected in hard plastic as they reach the ground to keep both the solar farm and its occupants safe.