Friday, November 29, 2013
DESPITE spending more than $50 million on the new critical care block, once the new facility at the Princess Margaret Hospital opens the same number of surgical theatres will be in operation.
Yesterday, physicians at PMH said they were worried that the new block would do very little in meeting the needs of the hospital because only three of the six new theatres are slated to be used when it opens. While the official opening was expected last month, it is still unclear when the Critical Care Clock will be fully operational.
Surgeons at PMH were told that the three existing theatres, which have been operating for decades, are to be closed down and sterilised. However there are fears that the exercise will not happen.
Additionally, there is no space allocated for the accident and emergency unit, which handles a high volume of patients each day, as administrative offices have been assigned to most of the space, one doctor said.
The project began in November 2011. It houses 20 private ICU rooms, 18 recovery beds, a central sterile department, new lab facilities and administrative facilities and a new main entrance which is disability friendly.
Thirty-three nurses, accredited by the Royal College of Nursing in the United Kingdom in critical care are expected to work in the new block.
Comments
HarryWyckoff says...
Posted 29 November 2013, 12:46 p.m. Suggest removal
ohdrap4 says...
the airport in marsh harbour also is not going to open
the new govt building in abaco is a mess, they built where there cant be a parking lot (something to do with sinkholes
the new hospital cant open
i think some stupid people walk on this land
Posted 29 November 2013, 3:19 p.m. Suggest removal
GQ says...
I have been informed the real reason the Airport Terminal at "The Leonard M. Thompson International Airport" in Marsh Harbour Abaco has not been opened is due to the fact that the government has not made payments to FES Construction that are due and they will not surrender the keys until they are paid. Enough of the bull s..t from the government, pay FES and open this building.
Further, I am told that when a certain client has guests they are cleared through the new terminal. I have no reason to doubt this and it is a shame and disgrace that other visitors have to put up with the dirty, messy outdated facility while one sits idle.
Posted 30 November 2013, 4:26 p.m. Suggest removal
ThisIsOurs says...
This story is confusing. Why is the new critical care block behind in schedule? Are the existing theaters being shut down because they have 3 news one that can substitute so that when they are cleaned you will have 6 operational? Why is there fear that they will not be scheduled for cleaning? What was the objective of the new building? Was it to duplicate the services of the existing hospital or to extend only some of the services ? All of this is really unclear... The original objective vs the expectation of the physicians could be two separate things but that's another issue...what does "most of the space" mean? how square footage much is allocated to patient care and how much to administrative offices?
Posted 30 November 2013, 4:44 p.m. Suggest removal
john33xyz says...
Stop sticking up for poor people. They need to learn to not be poor.
Posted 30 November 2013, 7:36 p.m. Suggest removal
justthefactsplease says...
Yuh all need to get the facts b4 yall print crap ... the story above is a bunch of baloney ... very little of it is true.
The private ICU rooms means private in that they have one person per room ... not private as in only for those who can afford them.
Posted 2 December 2013, 8:54 a.m. Suggest removal
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