South Wales Echo

7,000 NEW BEDS FOR VIRUS

- IAN LEWIS Reporter echo.newsdesk@walesonlin­e.co.uk

WALES’ Health Minister Vaughan Gething revealed up to 7,000 extra hospital beds are being created by NHS Wales as it prepares for an increase in coronaviru­s cases.

Critical care capacity has more than doubled across Wales and 1,000 new ventilator­s are on order.

The plans have been bolstered by a massive response from recently retired NHS staff ready to return to work – 1,300 healthcare profession­als have already responded and 1,200 registered GP locums are preparing to enter the NHS Wales workforce. They will be supported by thousands of trainees.

Health Minister Mr Gething said: “I have been overwhelme­d by the response of health and care profession­als to the calls we have made for their support. This is a humbling reminder of the commitment of our health and care staff.

“Over the last few days we have seen an increase in the pace and urgency of the response across Wales to prepare vital health and care services to meet the imminent challenges posed by coronaviru­s.”

The number of available critical care and invasively ventilated beds in Wales has more than doubled – there are now more than 350 and the number continues to increase.

Currently 48% of these beds are occupied and just over half of these are being used to care for people coronaviru­s. Hospitals in Wales have 415 ventilator­s and a further 349 anaestheti­c machines with ventilator capacity and 207 non-invasive ventilator­s. A further 1,035 ventilator­s are being procured by NHS Wales Shared Services Partnershi­p and through UK arrangemen­ts.

Dr Andrew Goodall, chief executive of NHS Wales, said: “Across Wales, training has been provided to upskill hundreds of staff who do not normally work in critical care.

“Extra areas have been identified in hospitals to provide more invasive ventilatio­n to patients over and above the space normally available in critical care units. This is in addition to those areas identified as surge capacity for critically ill patients as part of existing plans to double capacity when needed.

“Health boards are working to ensure people who are critically ill are treated in our hospitals using existing and additional capacity.”

Every health board is increasing its hospital bed numbers, including building field hospitals and working with the independen­t sector.

In Cardiff and Vale University Health Board, the Principali­ty Stadium in Cardiff will have space for 2,000 beds.

The Grange University Hospital will be opened early in the Aneurin Bevan UHB area providing an extra 350 beds.

A partnershi­p with St Joseph’s Hospital in Newport will provide an extra 36 beds.

Betsi Cadwaladr UHB will create an extra 870 beds at Venue Cymru, in Llandudno, Deeside Leisure Centre and Bangor University.

Cwm Taf Morgannwg UHB will create 900 extra beds at the Vale WRU centre and use the Vale Hospital in Hensol, Ty Trevithick in Abercynon and care home and community beds.

Hywel Dda UHB has plans for an additional 660 beds by using Carmarthen Leisure Centre, Llanelli’s

Parc y Scarlets stadium and Selwyn Samuel Centre and Bluestone in Pembrokesh­ire.

The private Werndale Hospital in Bancyfelin on the outskirts of Carmarthen is also being planned for use.

Swansea Bay UHB will create more than 1,400 beds at the Llandarcy Academy of Sport, Bay Studios in Swansea and it will also use Sancta Maria Hospital.

Powys Teaching Health Board is taking forward a range of opportunit­ies to create additional hospital beds in local communitie­s.

The NHS is working with military planners to make the extra capacity available as quickly as possible.

Mr Gething added: “In these most sombre of times it would be easy to forget what has been achieved within just a matter of weeks and the huge progress that has been made for preparing the NHS and social care services for coronaviru­s.

“We will be relentless in our preparatio­ns for the days and weeks ahead but it is important that we recognise what has already been done.

“Our health and care staff, volunteers and businesses in Wales, and indeed across the UK, are coming together in exceptiona­l ways to meet this extraordin­ary crisis and care for people, prepare services, and to protect communitie­s.

“Every single contributi­on will help save lives and I am truly thankful to everyone involved.”

His comments came as it was revealed yesterday that the number of deaths after positive tests for coronaviru­s in Wales had risen by 12 over the previous 24 hours.

Welsh Government figures also revealed the number of cases had risen by 355, taking the total to 3,197.

Dr Giri Shankar, incident director for the novel coronaviru­s (Covid-19) outbreak response at Public Health Wales, said: “Public Health Wales has conducted more than 14,000 tests for novel coronaviru­s (Covid-19) on nearly 12,000 individual­s since the start of this outbreak.

“Novel coronaviru­s (Covid-19) is now circulatin­g in every part of Wales. The single most important action we can all take in fighting coronaviru­s is to stay at home in order to protect the NHS, and save lives.

“We know that staying at home can be hard especially when the weather is nice and we want everyone to follow the rules.

“We want to thank each and every person across Wales for doing their bit to help slow the spread of the virus.”

The total number of confirmed deaths of people who tested positive for coronaviru­s in hospitals in England had risen to 4,494, NHS England said, up by 555 on the previous day’s update.

The patients were aged between 33 years and 103 years old, with 29 of the 555, aged between 35 and 95 years old, having no known underlying health condition.

NHS England gave the breakdown by region of the 555 deaths of patients with Covid-19 as:

– East of England 40; London 174; Midlands 74; North East & Yorkshire 103; North West 47; South East 81; South West 36.

The number of people who have died in Northern Ireland after contractin­g coronaviru­s has risen by seven to 63, health officials said.

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