New children’s unit opens at Hull Royal Infirmary

Communications TeamNews

A new £4m paediatric unit providing first-class facilities for Hull’s sick and injured children and their families has opened at Hull Royal Infirmary.

Hull University Teaching Hospitals NHS Trust (HUTH) has opened Ward H20 – known as Woodland Ward – with 23 beds as part of the major £19.3m construction project to redesign the front entrance and lower floors of the famous tower block.

Jane Dearing Judith Lightfoot Debbie Baron Ann Dalby Mariessa Turner Doctor Mohammed Yasmin Stevenson

Now located on the second floor following the major relocation from the 13th floor of the tower block, the new facilities have easy access link to Hull Women and Children’s Hospital, its operating theatres and Acorn children’s ward via the link bridge over Lansdowne Street.

Four high-dependency beds for the most poorly children and a larger Paediatric Assessment Unit (PAU), which now has nine rooms, are also part of the new unit on the same floor as Woodland Ward.

Pull-down beds have been added to single rooms so parents can stay with their children.  The unit also includes accommodation for parents with children in the Neonatal Intensive Care Unit (NICU) with five ensuite bedrooms, including one fully accessible room, and a dedicated lounge, enhanced with furniture, soft furnishings and art work funded by hospital charity WISHH’s By Your Side Appeal.

Vanessa Brown, Senior Matron for Children, Young People and Neonatal Services, said: “No one wants their child to be in hospital but our new ward means we can now offer parents and their children some of the finest paediatric services in the country.

“With its direct link to Hull Women and Children’s Hospital and our operating theatres, we can provide a much better experience and a far more comfortable environment for the children who need to come into hospital and their families.”

The opening of the paediatric unit is the latest stage in the major construction project to create a new three-storey entrance to Hull Royal Infirmary with an assessment unit, modern pharmacy, multi-faith area and restaurant and shops for patients, visitors and staff.

A much larger and self-contained assessment unit provides better facilities for patients with views over the front gardens and natural light. Pharmacy has moved to the back of the ground floor of the hospital, with a new robotic arm installed to pick prescriptions.

Two new lifts will take parents and their children directly to the second floor, without the need for them to use the main lift lobby, to help ease congestion at busy visiting times.

Duncan Taylor, Director of Estates, Facilities and Development, said: “We have tried to make these new facilities a little more child and family friendly.

“Hospitals can be frightening enough at the best of times, with beeping machines, medical gases and sockets everywhere.

“We’re created bright, spacious and airy facilities, with medical equipment tucked away behind special panels, to make the whole experience of coming to hospital better for children and their parents.”

Jess Wilkinson, project architect at Race Cottam Associates, the practice behind the design for the new paediatrics department and main entrance, said: “The challenge was working within the building’s existing footprint, meaning there was no room to provide additional space so we had to be creative with things like furniture layout and adding in smart space saving measures such as drop down beds.

“It was also essential that the design avoided feeling sterile or utilitarian so we engaged an art consultant to create a series of colourful wall graphics.”

Industrial action by Ambulance Services on 11 January 2023

Communications TeamNews

A single ambulance outside the entrance to Hull's Emergency Department

Ambulance service colleagues have announced that industrial action by both GMB and Unison members will be taking place on Wednesday 11 January 2023.

In readiness, we have been working to discharge as many patients as possible from hospital in advance of the strike, where those patients are medically fit and it is safe to do so.

Anyone with a hospital appointment on 11 January should continue to attend as normal unless contacted to advise otherwise. Should any changes become necessary as we approach the strike date, for example if an appointment has to be rescheduled or patient transport arrangements need to be changed, affected patients will be contacted directly to discuss in more detail.

Members of the public should be aware that there will be fewer ambulances on the roads during industrial action and they will be prioritising the most urgent and life-threatening calls. As a result, we will be stepping up efforts on the day to support timely ambulance turnaround for those crews arriving at our Emergency Department.

There are also likely to be fewer 999 and NHS111 call handlers available on the day and anyone contacting these services should expect longer call response times.

Anyone with non-urgent care needs should first seek help from NHS 111 online.

If you are unwell and need assistance, you should also consider alternatives such as:

  • Local pharmacies
  • Your GP practice
  • Story Street walk-in centre, Hull
  • Local Urgent Treatment Centres (Bransholme, Beverley, Goole and Bridlington), all of which are open into the evening with the exception of Bransholme which remains open 24hrs/day.

Regardless of any strike action taking place, it is really important that patients who need urgent medical care continue to come forward, especially in emergency and life-threatening cases – when someone is seriously ill or injured, or their life is at risk.