The Southland Times

Southern Charity Hospital building work finished

- Evan Harding

Another milestone has been reached for the Southern Charity Hospital in Invercargi­ll – the building work is finished, but more tasks need to be ticked off before it opens to the public.

Key players were this week unwilling to nominate an opening date, but expected it to be sometime this year.

The community-funded hospital would initially provide colonoscop­ies and dental work for its patients, with additional services to be added as the need arises.

The project, inspired by the tireless efforts of bowel cancer sufferer Blair Vining and his wife Melissa, began in late 2019, more than four years ago.

The former Clifton Club Inn now looks like a real hospital, complete with reception area, community room, operating theatre, recovery rooms, patient consulting rooms, dental practice, and with pieces of art adding to the finishing touches.

However, code compliance sign-offs were still needed and equipment had to be tested before the hospital opened.

The plan to build the charity hospital was motivated by the Vinings, who campaigned for the timely diagnosis and treatment of Kiwis suffering from cancer.

Blair died in October 2019, having earlier been diagnosed with bowel cancer and given six to eight weeks to live. He was told it would take eight weeks to get his first oncologist appointmen­t in the public heath system.

“This is ticking off Blair’s dying wish, to build a hospital,” Melissa said on Friday.

“The next stage is going to make it operationa­l, which will be pretty spectacula­r. It feels so real, seeing the theatre, recovery room, community room, all the furnishing­s, it really looks like a hospital now. It’s incredible seeing what the community has achieved.”

She said about 100 colonoscop­ies a month were declined in the public health system in the Otago Southland area.

“We are hoping to do those here.”

She understood the charity hospital would be capable of doing six to eight colonoscop­ies a day, depending on the complexity of the procedures, and subject to the volunteeri­sm of medical profession­als.

Southern Charity Hospital board chairman Dr Murray Pfeifer confirmed there was still a “fair bit” to do before the hospital opened.

The completion of the building was one step, and an important one, Pfeifer said.

“But the fit-out, and commission­ing of everything, and getting the consents we need, is still required. And that’s time consuming.”

The hospital was looking beautiful, he said. “We are all very proud of what’s been achieved so far. It’s just the start, it’s not the end.”

 ?? KAVINDA HERATH/SOUTHLAND TIMES ?? Southern Charity Hospital board member Melissa Vining in the community room at the hospital.
KAVINDA HERATH/SOUTHLAND TIMES Southern Charity Hospital board member Melissa Vining in the community room at the hospital.

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