The Peterborough Examiner

COVID field hospitals are not M*A*S*H

Ontario-built wings are ‘state-of-art electrical, mechanical systems’

- ANITA BALAKRISHN­AN

Long, white peaked structures have cropped up around Ontario hospitals — and while they use the same blueprint as military barracks and greenhouse­s, constructi­on workers are working to transform them into state-of-the art hospital wings.

Although they may not look it, the structures are field hospitals. Toronto’s BLT Constructi­on has built four such buildings in Ontario and worked on two in Quebec to house overflow patients as COVID-19 tests hospital capacity.

Field hospitals in themselves are nothing new. The model deployed in Vancouver by the Canadian Red Cross has been used to respond to more than 25 disasters over the past decade, including a cyclone in Mozambique and the Nepal earthquake.

Paul Waddell, a vice-president at BLT Constructi­on who heads up its rapid deployment team, says that while the concept may evoke images of M*A*S*H-style canvas tents, his team has worked to make field hospitals as close to the brick-and-mortar version as possible.

“These are state-of-the-art mechanical and electrical systems,” Waddell says. “They have the full nurse call and they have all the accoutreme­nts that would be required to properly house a patient bay … They’re

extremely safe.”

The parking-lot field hospitals, which can be built in as little as two weeks, have anywhere from 40 to 93 beds and are connected to the hospital by covered walkways. Waddell says the temporary buildings can safely power machines for oxygen, tracking vitals and adjusting lighting for the patients’ rooms, and the field hospitals have their own heating, cooling, air filtration and permanent plumbing for washrooms and showers.

Two major field hospitals opened to patients last week. Waddell says that as BLT learns new things about designing the field hospitals, the company adds elements to its previous designs.

Initially intended to be in use for just a few months, the fixtures now have a longer life span.

The field hospitals are now designed to be used for about two years, though Waddell says much of what BLT built for the Ontario field hospitals could be packed up and reassemble­d at a hospital elsewhere in the future.

 ?? NATHAN DENETTE ?? Constructi­on workers help assemble a make-shift hospital outside Joseph Brant Hospital in Burlington in April. Two new major field hospitals opened to patients last week.
NATHAN DENETTE Constructi­on workers help assemble a make-shift hospital outside Joseph Brant Hospital in Burlington in April. Two new major field hospitals opened to patients last week.

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