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Linstead Hospital A&E Reopened After $144-Million Renovation

By: , February 8, 2018

The Key Point:

The Accident and Emergency (A&E) Department at the Linstead Hospital in St. Catherine was officially reopened on Tuesday (February 6), following extensive renovation at a cost of $144.98 million.
Linstead Hospital A&E Reopened After $144-Million Renovation
Photo: Dave Reid
Minister of Health, Dr. the Hon. Christopher Tufton (third right), greets patients in the Accident and Emergency (A&E) Department at the Linstead Hospital in St. Catherine. The facility was officially reopened on Tuesday (February 6) following extensive renovation at a cost of $144.98 million. At second right is Chief Executive Officer of the National Health Fund (NHF), Everton Anderson.

The Facts

  • The work, undertaken through funding from the National Health Fund (NHF), included infrastructural upgrades, new furniture and equipment, installation of a new air-conditioning system, upgrading of the medical gas system, added amenities for staff, spacious area for patients, and comfortable treatment and examination rooms.
  • Minister of Health, Dr. the Hon. Christopher Tufton, who reopened the facility, informed that eight hospitals have had their A&E units upgraded and others will be expanded over the next financial year.

The Full Story

The Accident and Emergency (A&E) Department at the Linstead Hospital in St. Catherine was officially reopened on Tuesday (February 6), following extensive renovation at a cost of $144.98 million.

The work, undertaken through funding from the National Health Fund (NHF), included infrastructural upgrades, new furniture and equipment, installation of a new air-conditioning system, upgrading of the medical gas system, added amenities for staff, spacious area for patients, and comfortable treatment and examination rooms.

The project is intended to meet the high demand for emergency treatment and improve the quality of patient care.

Minister of Health, Dr. the Hon. Christopher Tufton, who reopened the facility, informed that eight hospitals have had their A&E units upgraded and others will be expanded over the next financial year.

Meanwhile, Dr. Tufton said strategies to reduce waiting time at public health facilities are bearing fruit.

The measures include improving customer service and assessment, redirecting non-emergency cases to the closest designated primary-care health centre, and extending the opening hours of clinics by up to five hours.

“We have seen improvement – a reduction of up to 50 per cent in the waiting time in those hospitals where we have put that mechanism in place,” the Minister said.

He noted that customer service has also improved at the facilities and work is under way to upgrade the skills of persons doing prescreening of patients.

Chief Executive Officer of the NHF, Everton Anderson, said the upgrading of the Linstead Hospital A&E will enable the facility to treat more persons, reducing the need for them to travel to Spanish Town and Kingston for such care.

“Jamaicans will continue to see improvement in health facilities by the work of the Fund,” Mr. Anderson pledged.

Member of Parliament for North West St. Catherine, Robert Pickersgill, who was also on hand, welcomed the improved facility.

Last Updated: February 8, 2018

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