The Press and Journal (Aberdeen and Aberdeenshire)

Public peek at renal unit

Health: Community helped fund facility

- BY STEPHEN WALSH

The public have been given their first look inside a new £1.5 million kidney dialysis unit which they helped bring to fruition.

The new renal facility is part of Kincardine Community Hospital in Stonehaven and will treat patients from as far south as St Cyrus.

At the moment, anyone requiring dialysis, which can last between three and four hours, has to make the journey to Aberdeen Royal Infirmary.

This means exhausted patients have the additional strain of a long trip before and after their gruelling treatment.

But yesterday, the health board held an open day at the centre, which marked the culminatio­n of five years of fundraisin­g from the local community.

Local groups and individual­s forked out £1m to help turn the dream into reality, in a campaign spearheade­d by the town’s rotary club.

Billy Hunter was president of the organisati­on when the fundraisin­g began and is still a member.

He said: “The rotary club is an organisati­on for older people, so we could relate to the benefits this was going to bring to the area.

“We felt really strongly

“The rotary club is an organisati­on for older people”

about this project which is why we took the lead, though every group and individual in Stonehaven has contribute­d.

“This affects everyone because you either know someone who requires this treatment or you are getting it yourself.

“The town is proud of this unit and has been really pleased that it has been named the Stonehaven Renal Unit.”

A survey carried out by NHS Grampian last summer revealed that between 35 and 40% of ARI kidney unit patients journey from as far afield as Laurenceki­rk.

The unit will be able to treat as many as 24 patients every week once it is working full time.

Dr Ann Humphrey, a retired specialist at ARI’s dialysis unit, was instrument­al in moving the project forward. She said: “My personal experience seeing the strain on dialysis patients made me committed to getting this unit in place before I retired.

“I think the fact this has been paid for by the community is wonderful and that’s why they have been invited here to have a look.”

The unit will undergo a deep clean in the coming days and is expected to open to patients next month.

 ??  ?? UNVEILING: Dr Ann Humphrey with Bill Mackie, senior technician of the new renal unit and Billy Hunter
UNVEILING: Dr Ann Humphrey with Bill Mackie, senior technician of the new renal unit and Billy Hunter
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