West Sussex Gazette

Hospitals trust freshens up its laundry services

A £5.9million investment to improve facilities

- Staff Reporter ws.letters@jpimedia.co.uk

A multi-million pound refresh of the laundry and linen department at St Richard’s Hospital in Chichester will boost productivi­ty, create 25 new jobs and reduce carbon emissions, according to the trust which runs the facility.

Western Sussex Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust is investing £5.9million over three years to replace all the equipment, improve efficiency and provide new capacity for the laundry to serve greater demand and potentiall­y more hospitals or other local businesses.

Director of estates and facilities at Western Sussex Hospitals David McLaughlin said: “Our laundry team washes more than four million items per year and we’re really pleased to move forward with this significan­t investment to replace and improve all the equipment,”

“A hospital laundry has operated from Broyle Road in Chichester since before the NHS was founded and, although our equipment is not that old, much of it has now become outdated and inefficien­t as washing technology has evolved.

“For example, cleaning nearly 90,000 bed sheets, scrubs and other items every week produces more than 800 tonnes of C02 a year – that’s around 13 per cent of the entire hospital’s carbon footprint.

“And given our prominent position in the community, we take our environmen­tal responsibi­lity very seriously and are committed to doing all we can to reduce our impact.”

Four options were considered to improve the laundry and linen service, including outsourcin­g it to a more efficient, larger-scale commercial operator.

The trust, however, is planning on becoming a larger trust in April by merging with Brighton and Sussex University Hospitals NHS Trust (BSUH), providing hospital decisionma­kers with a new perspectiv­e as they plan for the future.

Chief finance officer, Karen Geoghegan, said: “When we proposed the merger of our two trusts we promised we would continue to invest in our servicesan­dourpeople,andthe expansion and improvemen­t of our laundry service is exactly the type of developmen­t we had in mind.

“It’s better for our patients, better for our staff, better for our finances and better for the environmen­t too.

“For instance, we believe we can more than double the amount of laundry we do and at the same time reduce carbon emissions by at least 18 per cent.

“We will also be sourcing the majority of our water from a local borehole.”

The importance of infection control, retaining control over quality and ensuring the safety and welfare of patients and staff were also critical considerat­ions in determinin­g the future of the laundry service, the trust said.

The MP for Chichester has said that healthcare leaders were ‘re-looking at central sites’ in the city from which to administer the Covid-19 vaccine.

In an update on her website, Gilian Keegan MP said: “I have been pressing our local healthcare leaders to look into delivery of the vaccine through a central site in Chichester. They have committed to revising their plan and are re-looking at central sites.”

Meanwhile, vaccinatio­ns continue at GP-led sites elsewhere in the district, including in Selsey.

 ?? ?? Some of the laundry service team
Some of the laundry service team

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