Bath Chronicle

Ground breaking baby care unit marks 10 years

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Staff at the RUH are celebratin­g the 10th anniversar­y of the opening of the hospital’s innovative Dyson Centre for Neonatal Care.

The Neonatal Intensive Care Unit (NICU) admitted its first sick and premature babies on July 23 2011. It has seen around 5,000 babies and built a reputation for modern methods of care in surroundin­gs that provide a healing environmen­t for babies and reduce parents’ stress levels.

It is one of only six such units in England and Wales to have been awarded Unicef’s Baby Friendly accreditat­ion.

RUH medical director Dr Bernie Marden , a consultant neonatolog­ist and lead paediatric­ian who worked on the NICU project, said: “We needed to have a unit that really put the families at the centre of the care that we’re delivering.

“So it needed to be a welcoming space, somewhere that families would generally feel they wanted to spend their time, to be involved in the care of their babies.

“But it also needed to be the sort of space where our staff would work effectivel­y and safely to deliver the care that ultimately helps to get these children home.”

The result was a contempora­ry building filled by controllab­le natural light, with treatment rooms arranged around a clockwise route to illustrate the patient’s journey, beginning with intensive care units and ending with recovering patient rooms. Feedback from parents shows that progress along this route is important psychologi­cally, confirming the gradual decreasing intensity of care to journey’s end finally going home.

The unit has 21 cots, four double ensuite bedrooms for families, a play area for brothers and sisters, and a private enclosed garden for peace and quiet.

Taya Bassett, from Bath, who was a NICU baby herself in the old RUH unit, is grateful for the care her sixmonth-old twins Harvey and Charlie received after they were born prematurel­y.

She said: “We knew it wasn’t going to be an easy journey, but having the support of all the staff really made it a lot easier.

“I know from my own experience how incredibly grateful we are to everyone in NICU, because we wouldn’t have coped and got through it as well as we did without them.”

The new NICU replaced smaller, cramped facilities to provide a dramatical­ly different and improved environmen­t. It cost more than £6m and was half funded by the NHS and by public donations, through a public campaign led by the hospital’s charity The Forever Friends Appeal.

The major donor for the project was the James Dyson Foundation, which contribute­d £500,000. The constructi­on marked the start of a major programme of transforma­tion across the RUH site, which will culminate this summer with the start of building work for the new Dyson Cancer Centre.

Senior Sister Angie Walker said: “The main objective of the design of the new unit was to be a space to grow. I have had the privilege of working as a Senior Sister on both the old and new unit, as well as other neonatal units around the country, and I can honestly say that this unit has exceeded all my expectatio­ns.”

 ??  ?? Staff celebrate the 10th anniversar­y of the opening of the RUH’S Dyson Centre for Neonatal Care
Staff celebrate the 10th anniversar­y of the opening of the RUH’S Dyson Centre for Neonatal Care

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