East Yorkshire artist’s much-loved sculpture finds permanent home at Castle Hill Hospital

Communications TeamNews

A much-loved sculpture created by a popular local artist is set to bring comfort to patients after finding a permanent home at Castle Hill Hospital.

The life-size creation, fondly named ‘Arthur’, was created by Jill Atley, who passed away from brain cancer at the age of 64 in February 2020.

Jill’s last wish was for Arthur be placed at the Queen’s Centre for Oncology and Haematology to welcome visitors and bring comfort to patients and their friends and family.

Queen's Centre

The Queen’s Centre at Castle Hill Hospital

At her request, Hull University Teaching Hospitals NHS Trust has made a donation to Yorkshire Cancer Research in return for the opportunity to host the sculpture. Jill supported the charity for nearly 40 years as a member of the charity’s Driffield Volunteer Group.

Jill’s husband Noel said: “I’m delighted that we have been able to fulfil Jill’s final wish for Arthur to be permanently installed at the hospital where she was treated. Jill wasn’t very fond of hospitals, even though she was in a lovely ward and being well looked after.

“She thought that Arthur would be a good way of bringing a little joy into what might be, for many, an overwhelming experience when entering the Queen’s Centre for the first time. We hope that families, who may be facing uncertain and emotional times ahead, are able to take comfort from being able to sit and chat with Arthur.”

Described as “bringing love, laughter and a shining talent into all our lives”, Jill developed a passion for sculpting while at university, which began with detailed depictions of East Coast fishermen. Due to the high quality of the work she produced, Jill began receiving commissions, which she completed “to perfection”.

Among her notable pieces is a sculpture created to commemorate the Cattle Market in Beverley following the building of a Tesco supermarket on its former site.

‘Arthur’ was first created for an exhibition at Newby Hall and was viewed and enjoyed by more than 40,000 visitors to the country house during the summer of 2019. He was modelled in clay before being cast in bronze resin and then hand finished.

After Jill’s death, the sculpture was displayed at St. Mary’s Church in Beverley, where her funeral took place.

Noel said: “After the Tesco relief, Jill was always looking to the next big job. She was continuously improving her work and treated each piece as a new challenge. She eventually graduated to life size pieces, and Arthur was the last one.”

Sculpting allowed Jill to pursue other passions in life, such as sports and teaching. She taught art to students with learning difficulties and was an accomplished sportswoman, having played tennis, golf and squash competitively and playing tennis for Yorkshire in her youth.

Arthur at Newby Hall

Noel added: “Her sculptures schedule allowed Jill to enjoy the sports that she loved. She led a full life, and sculpting was always high up on the list. She had a powerful sense of fun and a very generous nature.”

Alongside bringing up three daughters, Jill dedicated a huge part of her life to raising funds and awareness for Yorkshire Cancer Research. She first joined the Driffield Volunteer Group in 1984, following Noel’s diagnosis with cancer just one year after their marriage.

Noel said: “During this period, she became aware of the need for funds to invest in the diagnosis and treatment of cancer. She really loved that the money raised at Yorkshire Cancer Research stayed in Yorkshire and benefited people in the region.”

Jill’s commitment was recognised when she was invited to Buckingham Palace to acknowledge 30 years’ service of volunteering.

Her friend Liz Pexton, a long-standing member of the Driffield Volunteer Group, said: “While she brought her humour to the meetings, she was a very constructive and dedicated member of the team, helping to increase the profile of the charity locally and to raise more than half a million pounds.”

Following Jill’s own diagnosis with incurable brain cancer in November 2019, she spent the time she had left making memories with her friends and family and continuing her work. Learning that her daughter Katherine was expecting a child brought her joy in her final days.

Noel said: “Underlying her optimistic and fun approach to life, Jill always had an understated but nevertheless gritty, determination and courage. She really had to draw upon this when facing the very sudden and devastating diagnosis. She knew there was no escape, but seemed to accept the situation, stoically and without resentment, to the very end.

“She was overjoyed and delighted when she discovered Katherine was expecting, although she knew she would never meet her grandchild. He is now with us and is named Jack Arthur in tribute to his grandmother’s work.”

The installation of Arthur complements Hull University Teaching Hospitals’ arts programme, Flourish. This programme is supported by the hospital charity, WISHH, whose Board of Trustees gave approval for the installation of Arthur at Castle Hill. Flourish recognises that the arts and creative approaches throughout our hospitals can keep people well, aid recovery, and help meet major challenges including long-term conditions, loneliness and mental health issues.

Director and WISHH trustee, David Haire, who leads on Flourish, said: “I had the pleasure of working alongside Jill regarding her work and we were exploring the possibility of featuring a sculpture at our hospitals.  Arthur is a fantastic addition to the Queen’s Centre, a truly striking sculpture.”

Chris Long, Chief Executive at the Trust, said: “It was our privilege to have been able to care for Jill in her final days and weeks, and it’s an honour to have her last work, Arthur, permanently reside with us now. I have no doubt that he will serve as both curiosity and comfort to patients and visitors to the Queen’s Centre for many years to come.”

Hull Parkinson’s Hub scoops prestigious national awards

Communications TeamNews

Doctors, nurses, therapists and social care staff working together to help people with Parkinson’s disease in Hull have won two major prizes for outstanding excellence at a national awards ceremony.

UK Parkinson’s Excellence Network, supported by Parkinson’s UK,  has presented its “Winner of Winners” award to the team from Hull University Teaching Hospitals (HUTH), City Health Care Partnership (CHCP) and Hull Clinical Commissioning Group (CCG) in recognition of their pioneering work.

The team, based at the Jean Bishop Centre in East Hull, was also named winners of the “Innovation in Practice” by the network, which has 7,000 members and is seen as the driving force behind improvements in the care of people with Parkinson’s and frailty.

Consultant Geriatrician Dr Tom Mace, who leads the Hull team, said: “We are proud and humbled with this award. It’s testament to the hard work and dedication of everyone involved in creating a unique, innovative hub to help people with Parkinson’s and their families live well.

“The integrated service makes tangible improvements in the quality of life for people and their carers. We work together to help people achieve their goals, ensure they feel supported and knowledgeable about their condition and reduce troubling symptoms and emergency hospital admissions.

“We hope that by sharing our learning experience from the hub, we will inspire and encourage colleagues across the UK to discuss and consider working in an integrated and holistic fashion across organisations and services, ensuring that people living with Parkinson’s and their carers and families experience improved continuity of care.”

Parkinson’s disease is a progressive disorder of the nervous system which causes parts of the brain to become more damaged over time. Around 1 in 500 people are thought to be affected by the condition. There is no cure although treatment can help reduce main symptoms of involuntary tremors, slow movement and stiff and inflexible muscles and maintain a good quality of life for as long as possible. It is a systemic disease which can affect the whole body and other symptoms can include anxiety and dementia.

Hull’s “Parkinson’s hub” was commissioned by Hull CCG. Members of Parkinson’s UK were consulted and listed education, quick access to specialists, expertise from healthcare professionals and quicker medication changes as priorities for a new community-based, multi-disciplinary service offering comprehensive assessments.

It now provides vital support to people with Parkinson’s, their carers and their families in one place, preventing multiple visits to different clinical teams at different locations around the city.

The hub pioneers a multi-disciplinary approach, with health specialists working with social care staff as well as private and voluntary organisations to support people with Parkinson’s. The team assesses general health, nutrition, swallowing, speech issues, oral health, sleep, impulsive compulsive disorder, continence and bowel function and direct people to other services provided by charities and social care.

As well as working proactively, the team also has the ability to respond to health-related issues quickly.

The Hull approach has prevented many emergency hospital admissions, allowing people with Parkinson’s the chance to live well and as independently as possible in their own homes with the right support from the right health care professionals.

The UK Parkinson’s Excellence Network announced its winners at a virtual award ceremony co-hosted by Parkinson’s UK’s President Jane Asher and Terence Manning, a former head teacher living with Parkinson’s, who judged entries.

The Hull team saw off competition from the “Sharing, Learning and Education” and “Person-Centred Care” award winners to be named “Winner of Winners” and claim the Excellence Award.

The judges, including a panel of Parkinson’s health and service professionals, as well as patients, praised the Hull hub for its overwhelming dedication to pioneering good practice and striving to improve the experience of people with Parkinson’s.

They said: “It is a great project that has people affected by Parkinson’s at its very heart. It has received excellent service-user feedback. It is a really comprehensive, joined-up and holistic service for patients and good for multidisciplinary teams’ skill sharing.”

Dr Donald Grosset, Clinical Director of the UK Parkinson’s Excellence Network, said: “This year, the quality of entries was exceptional and I would like to congratulate Hull University Teaching Hospitals NHS Trust, City Health Care Partnership, NHS Hull CCG for a great team effort on their well-deserved success, outstanding feedback and for being at the forefront of pioneering truly innovative Parkinson’s care.

“We were impressed by the exemplary care given to people with Parkinson’s and the difference the hub is making to people’s lives. It shows the difference we can make by working in collaboration. “

Dr Mace added: “The team would like to thank all those who assisted this work including colleagues from CHCP, HUTH and Hull CCG. Particularly, we would like to thank Dr Alec Ming and Lesley Windass for their ongoing support.”

20,000 new LED lights fitted in Hull’s hospitals

Communications TeamNews

Wards, clinics and offices at Hull Royal Infirmary and Castle Hill Hospital have been fitted with new LED lighting to reduce the impact of Hull’s hospitals on the environment.

Hull University Teaching Hospitals NHS Trust (HUTH) has introduced 20,000 LED light fittings at both hospitals and hospital buildings across East Yorkshire to cut its energy bill.

The major relighting project, overseen by HUTH’s capital team, began in December 2020 and has just been completed.

Marc Beaumont, Head of Sustainability, said the LED lighting switch was part of HUTH’s Zero Thirty campaign, launched in the summer, to be a UK leader in tackling the NHS’s impact on climate change.

He said: “We’ve set ourselves the ambitious target of becoming the first hospital trust in England to achieve net zero carbon emissions by 2030.

“The completion of the lighting project next month means our plans are gathering pace. We have said we will not stand by and do nothing and this is just the first project of many that will be undertaken by the trust over the next nine years.”

Other projects include the insulation of roofs and external walls to reduce heating loss, the use of wind and solar power to general electricity and the replacement of gas-fired boilers with air source heat pumps.

These projects focus on one of our largest source of emissions, the buildings that we occupy. However, we’re looking at how we can reduce carbon emissions from everything we do, how we treat our patients, the drugs we use and how we travel to work.

HUTH is also constructing a solar panel field in Cottingham that will to generate all of Castle Hill hospital’s day-time energy needs during the summer months.

 

Hull nurse scoops prestigious national nursing award

Communications TeamNews

Congratulations to liver nurse specialist, Dianne Backhouse, who has been announced as the deserving winner of the Nurse of the Year award at the Nursing Times Awards 2021.

Last night, in a glittering ceremony held at the Grosvenor House Hotel on Park Lane, London, nurses and organisations from across the profession were honoured across 25 categories in a night of recognition dedicated to celebrating exceptional achievement.

Following a rigorous judging process, Dianne emerged as the winner of the evening’s final and arguably most coveted award, Nurse of the Year. She earned the title based on her work to develop the role of the liver nurse specialist at HUTH as well as for the work she has carried out to improve care for her patients with liver disease and support them to stay at home.

The judges were won over by Dianne’s innovative, patient-focused approach and genuine impact on patient care. Before her appointment at the trust, there was no hepatology specialist nursing which was greatly needed; working with the matron and consultants she established a job plan to fill this gap.

Steve Ford, editor of Nursing Times, said:

“Every year, the Nursing Times Awards showcase the innovation and best practice of nurses and midwives across the UK, providing an opportunity to celebrate and share all that is good about the nursing profession.

“But I think it’s safe to say that 2021 is special. The past 18 months have once again seen truly incredible work by nursing staff, as the unprecedented and ongoing challenge posed by the pandemic and its impact on services continues. Their efforts deserve our thanks and recognition.

“Having read through the judge’s comments on our winners, I know we are giving awards to some very, very special individuals, organisations and projects.”

Discover the complete winners list at awards.nursingtimes.net/2021-winners.

 

Lockdown quilters inspired by Queen’s Centre Quilt of Memories

Communications TeamNews

A group of quilters have been inspired by a work of art at Castle Hill Hospital to capture their experience of the pandemic.
Rainbow Quilters was founded by Helen Dickinson and her quilting tutor Linda Alexander after Helen spotted the Quilt of Memories remembering people who have lost their lives to leukaemia and other cancers on display at the Queen’s Centre.
Helen said: “My husband Paul received chemotherapy and radiotherapy treatment at the Queen’s Centre between December and January.
“Due to Covid-19 restrictions, I had to wait in the car whilst he received treatment but I had to go into the Queen’s Centre once to collect his medication to carry to the car.
“It was then that I saw the most wonderful quilt in the reception area of the Queen’s Centre. I kept thinking about this for days afterwards, especially the idea that every quilt tells a story. This in turn inspired me to set the wheels rolling to create a quilt that captured people’s experiences of lock down.”
Helen was inspired by the Quilt of Memories, created by Sylvia Priest to thank hospital staff for the care shown to her husband Tony with the support of Helping Hands – Stitching and Sewing for Good Causes – along with UK Quilters United and Cottingham-based East Yorkshire Embroidery Society. The Quilt of Memories was the culmination of a three-year project and features 140 individually hand-crafted quilt blocks made by more than 200 pairs of hands from the online group,
Helen and Linda set up Rainbow Quilters, named in recognition of the ‘hope and cheer’ that rainbows came to represent during the pandemic, using email and word of mouth to recruit 26 members from Lincolnshire in two weeks.
Helen said: “We heard many reasons why people wanted to join us – to relieve boredom, loneliness and feelings of isolation. to have a purpose, to feel part of a community and to do something worthwhile and positive as well as raise funds for a good cause.
“Most participants knew one person in the group, nobody knew everyone, yet all were united by their love of sewing and the desire to create something special.”
The group created 45 blocks for the project known as the 2020 Reflections Quilt, each block reflected the creator’s individual experience of Covid-19.
One block features a woman with rainbow coloured hair and the strands of her hair feature words, phrases and names now commonplace in our language including furlough, Chris Whitty, stay home and sanitizer. It also features words like Amazon, highlighting our reliance on internet shopping and deliveries during lockdown, and toilet rolls – marking the panic buying seen in parts of the country at the start of the pandemic.
Other blocks on the quilt include cakes and treats one quilter made for her father before his death, wildlife and wildflowers noticed and admired by people in close proximity to their homes while the country was in lockdown and colourful images of the virus itself.
The story of Rainbow Quilters and the inspiration for each block has been published in a booklet being sold to raise funds for Ending Domestic Abuse Now in Lincolnshire (EDAN Lincs), which supports all those suffering or fleeing domestic abuse.
The quilt is being exhibited in and around Lincolnshire until May 2022 when it will be retired to a good home in the community.
Email rainbowquilters2020@gmail.com if you’d like a copy of the booklet.
 

Cyclotron arrives at Castle Hill, lifting Daisy Appeal into UK top tier for medical scanning and research

Communications TeamNews

A charity which is working to develop “dose-on-demand” radiotracers with improved detection and personalised treatment for patients with cancer, heart disease and dementia has taken a big step towards its goal with the delivery to Castle Hill Hospital of a consignment of UK-leading PET-CT scanning and research equipment.

Prof Nick Stafford, founder and Chair of the Daisy Appeal, said the arrival of the 30-tonne GE Healthcare GenTRACE  600 cyclotron is “a very exciting day for the Charity and the healthcare community in our region.”

Prof Steve Archibald, Professor in Molecular Imaging at the University of Hull, said the technology will maximise benefits to patients from across East Yorkshire and Northern Lincolnshire by making available a wide range of imaging and diagnostic techniques.

Prof Archibald added that his team will be able to attract more clinical trials to the region. Prof Stafford said the project will also bring considerable economic benefits including raising the region’s profile with facilities which are unique in the UK, and generating high-quality jobs.

The cyclotron components arrived at Castle Hill Hospital, Cottingham, and were transferred in a series of crane lifts over the roof of the admin building to the loading bay at the new Molecular Imaging Research Centre (MIRC).

The pieces will be assembled in the new building over the next two weeks and the cyclotron will become operational early in 2022 as the latest piece in a jigsaw which Prof Stafford has been working on since he launched the Daisy Appeal in 2000.

The Daisy Appeal Medical Research Centre opened at Castle Hill Hospital in 2008 and was followed, in 2014, by the opening of the Jack Brignall PET-CT Scanning Centre, housing the first in a new type of Siemens scanner in the country.

But with the radiotracers used in the Jack Brignall Centre having a short life span, the Daisy Appeal’s vision was to raise funds for the MIRC and pursue a “dose-on-demand” approach by making their own isotopes.

The total cost of the new centre is around £8.5m, including equipment to the cost of about £3.5m, about £1m of which is accounted for by the cyclotron components.

Once up and running the centre will initially be able to produce Fluorine 18 radiotracers, which are currently used in most scans but which the Daisy Appeal previously had to source elsewhere. During the next two or three years the centre will also be able to produce Carbon 11 radiotracers, which have great potential for neurological and cardiological use and will open up other opportunities.

The new building creates the opportunity for the isotopes to be piped directly from the cyclotron to hot cells in the room next door, where the product will be processed, checked and then delivered through a hatch in the wall direct to the Jack Brignall Centre for injection into patients.

Prof Archibald said: “The technology from GE Healthcare matches our unique approach to ‘dose-on-demand’ radiotracer production which will make a wide range of imaging and diagnostic techniques available. This will maximise benefits to local patients.

“The provision of cutting-edge cyclotron technology in Hull elevates us to the level of a handful of clinical sites in the UK and, when combined with our expertise and our own unique technology, will enable us to deliver improved clinical imaging to diagnose and monitor treatment response in cancer, cardiac and neurological patients.

“The technology will also improve our research, which is already internationally competitive, and attract clinical trials to Hull to further improve standards of patient care.”

Prof Stafford said: “The delivery of the cyclotron really sees the whole PET-CT project finally coming to fruition. The MIRC will become operative next year, at which point patients will benefit from our ability to manufacture personalised radiotracers tailored to the requirements of their disease on site.

“The cyclotron puts us in the top tier for this work in the UK and also opens up the opportunity for us to make carbon based radiotracers which have exciting new applications in cancer, cardiac and neurological imaging. It is a very exciting day for the Daisy Appeal and the healthcare community in our region.”

The Daisy Appeal has raised more than £20m to fund cutting-edge research and state-of-the-art equipment and facilities. Hull-based construction company Hobson & Porter built the Jack Brignall Centre and the new MIRC, which is due to be formally handed over to the charity later this year.

Claire Levy, Daisy Appeal Fundraiser, said: “One of the most important aspects of fundraising is having the ability to show donors how their money has been used to deliver on the charity’s aims and objectives.

“The Daisy Appeal has already brought enormous benefits to patients from across the Hull and Humber region with the Medical Research Centre and the Jack Brignall Centre, and the delivery today of a cyclotron is another huge step forward.

“We are grateful to all the businesses, communities and individuals who have played a vital part in helping us to reach this milestone, but the journey continues. We are closing in on our target of £8.5m to complete the MIRC and we will then focus our efforts on meeting the substantial running costs.”

To find out more about the Daisy Appeal please visit https://daisyappeal.org/

Queen’s Centre Acute Assessment Unit opens at Castle Hill Hospital

Communications TeamNews

A new assessment unit to see and treat patients undergoing treatment for cancer and blood disorders has opened at Castle Hill Hospital.

The Queen’s Centre Acute Assessment Unit aims to help people manage their illnesses and any complications related to their treatment.

Hull University Teaching Hospitals (HUTH) has invested £1m in the new unit to provide timely support to Haematology and Oncology patients.

Wherever possible, patients will also be able to return to their own homes after treatment instead of having to stay on a hospital ward.

 

Senior Matron Lisa Hartley said: “Clinical staff in both our Haematology and Oncology Departments want their patients to be treated in the right place at the right time.

“The Queen’s Centre Acute Assessment Unit will provide first-class facilities for patients requiring assessment and urgent treatment during their cancer treatment.

“This will ensure our patients have access to the unplanned assessment and treatment they require from dedicated and experienced health care professionals within a day case setting.”

The trust started a pilot scheme in 2018 to support patients with cancer and blood disorders from a small assessment area in the  Radiotherapy Department before moving to Ward 29 at the start of the pandemic to help keep the patients, who are immunocompromised and at greater risk from Covid-19, as safe as possible.

Around 8,500 patients have been assessed and treated since the pilot began, with around 70 per cent well enough to go home later that day without being admitted to a ward.

The success of the pilot scheme made it apparent the service required a new home, large enough to accommodate patients in a safe clinical area and with all the necessary facilities for treatment to be undertaken.

Located on the ground floor of the Queen’s Centre, the assessment unit features six glass-fronted isolation cubicles, three treatment rooms including one en-suite and three bays with seven treatment chairs, which will allow the unit to care for up to 16 patients once it is fully operational.

A dedicated team of nursing staff, led by Sister Louise Walters, have hung their own photographs of local beauty spots on the walls and the unit is painted sunshine yellow to create a warm and relaxing environment. The team has also undertaken fundraising events and has received donations to improve the environment for patients.

Patients will continue to be assessed over the telephone through a dedicated help line and, if further support is required, will be asked to attend the unit by appointment. They will be assessed by skilled oncology and haematology doctors and nurses and may undergo blood tests, x-rays and treatments including blood transfusions, fluid infusions and medication reviews.

Any member of the public worried about possible symptoms of cancer and patients with concerns unrelated to their cancer diagnoses should contact their GP surgery directly.

Hospital records now available through the NHS App

Communications TeamNews

You can now securely access your outpatient letters and hospital appointments electronically via the NHS App.

The NHS App already allows you to see your vaccinations status, order repeat prescriptions, book and manage GP appointments, get health information and advice, view your NHS Number and view your GP health record securely.

The new service, which is completely free, will link your hospital information in the App, allowing you to view your hospital outpatient appointment letters and appointment details and add information to your record, such as measurements, data from devices such as fitness watches and symptoms.

In the future it will also give you secure online access to hospital scans and test results and it’s all thanks to some extra technology that we have added to the app for our patients.

How to register

1. Download the NHS App

First you need to register for the national NHS App, which you can do by searching for ‘NHS App’ in the App Store or Google Play and following the instructions. If you don’t have a smart device you can also sign up and access the service via a web browser.

You will be asked to follow a number of steps to verify your identity so that you can securely log in and access all of the services in the national NHS App.

2. Sign up to our additional service in the NHS App, run by Patients Know Best (PKB)

To get access to your hospital appointment letters, you need to follow a few further steps:

  • Open ‘messages’ in the NHS App and select ‘consultations, events and messages’
  • A message will open asking if you agree to share your NHS login information with Patients Know Best. Click ‘I agree’
  • Register with your email address, a strong password and a security question
  • Accept the privacy agreement and click the ‘register’ button
  • You’re all set! Next time you log into the app you will be able to see both your GP and hospital appointment information.

Please be reassured that whilst PKB is our partner in providing this service, they do not have any access to your health information, which remains secure. Your information doesn’t move from the NHS and you will be the only person who can view the information available through the App.

 

Hull hospitals staff support Covid effort overseas

Communications TeamNews

The global Covid pandemic has been a frightening and uncertain time for us all. Personally and professionally, it has made us reflect and made us grateful for what we have. We appreciate being able to have friends and family around us more, we’re thankful for our freedoms, and we’re grateful for a health service which has spearheaded the battle against Covid-19.

But not everyone has been so fortunate. Some of us have already lost friends, co-workers and loved ones to the virus, and many of our own staff with family and loved ones abroad have felt concern for their wellbeing and the anguish of not being there to help.

Among those watching Covid-19 claim lives in her home country was Sri Lankan born critical care consultant, Dr Pumali Gunasekera. Having seen patients come in and out of Hull’s ICU with the virus for the past 18 months, she knows just how debilitating Covid can be and how important it is for patients to receive timely medical care.

Moved by images of countries like Sri Lanka and India struggling to cope with the sheer numbers of Covid infections, she set about gathering equipment and supplies which could be used to aid the international Covid response.

Dr Gunasekera appealed to colleagues throughout the trust for unused or obsolete equipment and supplies that could be sent abroad; and the response she received was amazing.

“I was overwhelmed with the response,” says Dr Gunasekera. “I received donations from all over; emergency care, theatres, ICU outreach, clinical practice educators and more, all with equipment which could no longer be used here, but which was still suitable for use abroad.

“Respiratory physicians Dr Pinder and Dr Crooks and senior matron Vicky Sharman helped me to source CPAP machines that were surplus to requirements and these were very kindly released by chief executive, Chris Long. Many of the departmental housekeepers also helped by sorting through their stores and finding suitable supplies to send over.”

Among the items sent to hospitals in Sri Lanka were more than 35 CPAP machines, a variety of airway and breathing equipment including oxygen masks, NIV masks, and laryngoscopes, plus PPE to protect clinical staff including surgical face masks, FFP3 masks and gowns.

And the recipients couldn’t have been more grateful. Chief nursing officer for National Hospital Kandy in Sri Lanka, Mr Jayamanne, wrote to Vicky Sharman upon receipt of a donation to say thank you.

“As a fellow nurse facing similar pressures of patient care and flow in a pandemic, I find it inspiring that you were able to think of the welfare of patients on the other side of the world during this crisis.  A true embodiment of the “missioner of health” pledge that we take”.

Members of the College of Anaesthesiologists and Intensivists of Sri Lanka also wrote to Chris Long with their thanks, having distributed CPAP machines among 15 of the hospitals they support.

“With the emergence of the third wave of the pandemic, patients requiring intensive care services in Sri Lanka have risen within a very short period of time. As a result, the healthcare system is saturated and overburdened due to a surge of admissions of critically ill, both COVID and non- COVID patients, to the intensive care units amidst limited resources.

“We greatly appreciate your donation and thank you for your generosity towards uplifting standards of critical care facilities [in our ICUs] in the country.”

Dr Gunasekera adds:

“This equipment could no longer be used by our trust, so it’s fantastic to know that it’s been put to good use in hospitals where it’s really needed. The compassion for others and the goodwill shown by colleagues here has been really uplifting, and just shows that even in the tough times, in the middle of a global pandemic, we are all in it together.

“On behalf of the ICU team and all the receiving hospitals over in Sri Lanka, I’d like to say a huge thank you to everyone who helped with the appeal.”

Using hand-held devices to help your treatment

Communications TeamNews

We’re not on our phones! It might look like we are but only because we need to be.

From Monday, our wards at Castle Hill are switching over to digital nurse care records. This means our ward-based staff will be using hand-held devices that look similar to phones to record vital information about their patients and their treatment plans.

Please be reassured that our staff are not using these hand-held devices to browse through social media, check emails or use them for any other business. It’s all about patient care and our mission to switch from paper records.

Thanks very much for help, support and understanding as we make the transition to this new digital way of working to provide the best possible care for you and your loved ones.