By MATT MAURA
Bahamas Information Services
THE government is poised to invest almost $200m in the infrastructural expansion and improvement of the country’s hospitals beginning later this month.
The expansion process is expected to take place over a two-year period and will include an $18m investment in an electronic medical records system; a $17m investment in upgrades and expansions to the Maternity Ward at the Princess Margaret Hospital that will almost triple the space currently in use by Maternity Ward and Obstetrics and Gynaecology.
Expansions and upgrades to the Accident and Emergency (A&E) Department at the Princess Margaret Hospital are also on the drawing board that will bring the department in line with A&E facilities and services in developed countries along with the implementation of a 24-hour patient advocacy service.
On September 5, Public Hospitals Authority (PHA) Managing Director Herbert Brown said at a nursing diploma programme launch at PHA, the introduction of the Health Information System will allow public health officials to address one of the significant areas of transformation in the public healthcare system “with regards to the intermittently inadequate quantities of pharmaceuticals in our hospitals and clinics”.
The new system will provide the PHA with the opportunity to be able to track every pharmaceutical item - from distribution from its new main warehouse (to be established on Shirley Street) to the hospitals or any other point of dispensing to patients.
“This will allow us to top-up the minimum order level of drugs without having to wait for a request from the wards or clinics,” Mr Brown said. “To carry out this agenda, a new pharmaceutical top-up unit will be established at the Princess Margaret Hospital and subsequently at the Rand Memorial Hospital resulting in a more efficient method of maintaining the required inventory.”
Mr Brown said the contract for the upgrades and expansions to the Maternity Ward at PMH is expected to be executed within the next two weeks and that the works are expected to result in significant benefits to the delivery of patient care at the country’s tertiary public healthcare institution, while further improving medical outcomes.
The upgrades/expansions will also address working conditions for staff.
“If you were to visit the Maternity Ward of the Princess Margaret Hospital today, you would notice that there are cramped conditions for patients; inadequate space and that the working conditions for our staff is less than adequate. Being able to expand the space to bring our Maternity Ward up to international standards – which requires that you have a certain amount of space between each bed - for the first time in the history of the Princess Margaret Hospital, is going to be a significant factor,” Mr Brown said.
The upgrades will also allow for the construction of two, additional state-of-the-art operating theatres.
“What this means,” he said, “is that we will be able to move from seven operating theatres to nine operating theatres at the Princess Margaret Hospital. This will allow for services that might be required in the Maternity Ward - rather than having to go to the Main Operating Theatre - those procedures can be done on the Maternity Ward. This is also going to be very significant.
“Additionally, we would have almost tripled the space that the Maternity and (Obstetrics and Gynaecology) will have and so that too is going to be very significant.”
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