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Celia Blakey Day Unit reopens at William Harvey Hospital in Ashford

14:00, 17 March 2017

A cancer ward has finally reopened at the William Harvey Hospital after almost two years.

The Celia Blakey Day Unit has moved into the former Arundel unit after a £200,000 refurbishment.

Staff shortages saw the chemotherapy ward close in July 2015 and patients were forced to travel to Canterbury for treatment.

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Eleanore Quadri, Macmillan consultant nurse/Senior Matron and Tracey Rigden, chemotherapy matron at the Celia Blakey Day Unit
Eleanore Quadri, Macmillan consultant nurse/Senior Matron and Tracey Rigden, chemotherapy matron at the Celia Blakey Day Unit

A mobile chemotherapy unit was parked in the Ashford hospital car park while health bosses worked to recruit enough staff to reopen a permanent ward.

Now Eleanore Quadri, Macmillan consultant nurse and senior matron on the ward, said the team are delighted with the new space, which has been a long time coming.

Mrs Quadri, who has worked for East Kent Hospitals Trust, which runs the William Harvey Hospital, for about five years, said: "We have been waiting for this for a long time and a lot of hard work has gone into getting it to where it is today.

VIDEO: Eleanore Quadri talks about the new ward

"The staff have been really involved in the refurbishment process and able to say what will and will not work. I’m so pleased, it looks exactly how I envisaged it.

"The previous ward served a purpose but it was just so cramped and the chairs were so close to each other.

"Then we had the mobile chemotherapy unit, which was supported by the charity Hope For Tomorrow and that was a huge help.

"But this new unit will improve a patient’s experience when they are going through chemotherapy, it’s bringing treatment closer to their homes and it also ensures they have a good facility to be treated from.”

The Celia Blakey Day Unit has reopened at the William Harvey Hospital
The Celia Blakey Day Unit has reopened at the William Harvey Hospital

Tracey Rigden, chemotherapy matron who has worked for the Trust for about 20 years, said she is privileged to have been able to see this bespoke project through from start to finish.

She said: "Not many people get to help build a purpose-designed ward for cancer patients in their career and it’s been an honour to do so.

"We are just so thankful to all of the teams and the builders because we feel that we now have such an amazing area to work from that’s not only going to benefit the patients but also improve the morale for the staff because they can’t wait to get back here as well."

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