YOU are going to have to DEMAND that they do better than improve outcomes and 'care'. The expectation should be getting to 100% recovery. The tyranny of low expectations can't be allowed to infect a new facility. Your stroke medical professionals will not do that, stroke survivors have to start screaming at these 'professionals'.
$30m stroke and rehab unit to benefit 'thousands' at Auckland City Hospital
A $30 million facility for stroke patients is set to be built at one of the country's busiest hospitals.
On Thursday, Health Minister David Clark announced a new integrated
stroke and rehabilitation unit would be built within existing space
at Auckland City Hospital.
Currently, stroke care at the hospital was sprawled across two
different levels and rehabilitation was elsewhere, making it
confusing for patients and their families.
The project was part of the Government's $750 million infrastructure
investment in the 2018 Budget and construction would begin in late 2019.
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"Co-locating these services in a new purpose-built unit will help to
improve continuity of care for patients and reduce the overall time
spent in hospital," Clark said.
The new facility would create an extra 41 beds for stroke
patients, spaces for targeted rehabilitation, a central dining area, gym
and other shared spaces for patients and their families.
Thousands of stroke patients would benefit from better care at the new
integrated stroke and rehabilitation inpatient unit, Clark said.
"Stroke is the third largest killer in New Zealand after cancer and
heart disease and outcomes tend to be worse for Māori and Pacific
people.
"While we are making progress in tackling the contributors to stroke,
demand for stroke care in Auckland is rising due to population growth
and demographic changes.
"There's a pressing need to expand these services. That's why the
Government has approved $30m in funding for this new facility."
Clark said the facility would improve the continuity of care and reduce
the time patients spent in hospital, which would make a strong
difference for stroke patients.
The facility is set to be completed by mid-2020.
A former stroke patient, Joel Pohio, said news of the facility was positive for future patients and their families.
Pohio was at home with his family when he had a stroke on December 4.
It was unexpected and sudden, and his wife, Tessa, said it had turned their lives upside down.
Pohio was rushed to hospital where he underwent clot removal and also had part of his skull removed.
"It was a bit confusing, I was heavily medicated – it felt like I was
in a coma for a week and then I was in rehabilitation," Pohio said.
The new facility meant stroke care would be more streamlined and
patients would get to know staff from start to finish, making the
experience slightly easier, he said.
Although his road to recovery was long, Pohio was looking forward to
the future and was encouraged by his young family to keep getting
better, he said.
Tessa Pohio said her husband's stroke was "really traumatic" for the West Auckland family.
The announcement was a good step forward and she thought it was nice
that people working on the facility's design had listened to views of
family members, she said.
Auckland District Health Board (ADHB) said in a statement the new unit
would mean stroke patients could have all of their care in a single
facility.
The facility was the first project in the DHB's Building for the Future programme, the statement said.
ADHB's chief executive Ailsa Claire said the unit would not only
improve outcomes and experiences for patients and whānau, but would
provide a better working environment for staff.
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