South Wales Evening Post

Burns unit will move to new location at hospital

- Senior Local Democracy Reporter richard.youle@walesonlin­e.co.uk

A REGIONAL burns centre which had to close a ward due to a shortage of specialise­d staff will move to a different location close by.

The Welsh Centre for Burns and Plastic Surgery at Morriston Hospital shut its inpatient ward between October and February.

It has been impacted by a reduction in anaestheti­c consultant numbers due to retirement and long-term sickness, according to a Swansea Bay University Health Board risk report.

The unit was confirmed as the regional centre of excellence for burns patients in Wales and the South West of England in 2010. The Welsh Government refurbishe­d and extended it at a cost of £10 million. The centre was said to treat around 750 patients per year.

The health board said it was able to assess and treat urgent burns cases while the inpatient ward was closed. These cases could then be transferre­d to other UK specialist burns centres. It added that the service’s other work continued as normal.

The ward reopened on February 14 with ongoing support from intensive care consultant­s and anaestheti­sts.

The plan now is to co-locate the burns centre within Morriston

Hospital’s general intensive care unit – a move which is expected to be completed by mid-2023 and, according to a report by health board chief executive Mark Hackett, require “significan­t capital investment”.

Speaking at a health board meeting, Mr Hackett paid tribute to staff members Mark Ramsey, Tersa Humphreys and Richard Evans for their work in reopening the burns service and setting out a plan for its long-term sustainabi­lity.

Last month the health board said the burns service was seeing more elderly patients and expressed concerns that, with energy bills soaring, the number could rise as people use heaters to keep warm.

Speaking at the time, burns centre occupation­al therapist Janine Evans said our skin becomes thinner as we age, meaning accidental burn injuries are a higher risk.

She said: “The physiologi­cal changes that occur as we age, such as increased frailty, reduced cognition, and a decline in vision and perception, mean older adults are at a higher risk of an accidental burn injury.”

 ?? MARK SMITH ?? The Welsh Centre for Burns and Plastic Surgery at Morriston Hospital in Swansea.
MARK SMITH The Welsh Centre for Burns and Plastic Surgery at Morriston Hospital in Swansea.

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