First look at new home for Alder Hey Children’s Hospital – watch our video and read the interview.


  • Children’s designs inspire Europe’s first hospital in a park.

  • £250m scheme includes a brand new state of the art hospital along with a dedicated research, education and innovation facility.

Alder Hey Children’s Hospital will start its move into a brand new state of the art facility tomorrow.

New Alder Hey Hospital Liverpool. Images by Gareth Jones

New Alder Hey Hospital Liverpool.
Images by Gareth Jones

The new ‘Alder Hey in the Park’ will feature a uniquely designed children’s hospital alongside a dedicated children’s research and innovation facility, creating a leading-edge Centre for children’s healthcare and research. The entire hospital will relocate during a five day move from 2nd to 6th October.

The new state-of-the-art hospital within ‘Alder Hey in the Park’, has been inspired and designed with the help of children and young people.

It will have 270 beds, including 48 critical care beds for patients in ICU, HDU and Burns, together with 16 digitally enhanced operating theatres. The majority of children and their families will have their own room and en-suite facilities; with each ward equipped with its own kitchen providing freshly cooked food to order.

Europe’s only hospital in a park, the unique design of the building will provide a pleasant healing environment for children and young people. Almost all bedrooms have park views and patients will have easy access to play areas on and outside their ward. Alder Hey’s old buildings will be demolished and replaced by parkland, leaving a new hospital sitting in the heart of Springfield Park, with views of green space or parkland from every patient’s window.


 

The designs for the new world class facility have been inspired by children. Over 900 young people taking part in the initial consultation; with one patient, Eleanor Brogan, inspiring the architects final design with her drawing. Alder Hey in the Park has been designed to meet the expectations of patients who wanted to be looked after in a place that was fun, helped them recover quickly and most importantly didn’t look like a hospital. A Children and Young People’s Design Group have continued to have their say throughout the design process on everything from the colour of their room, to the artwork displayed in the new hospital and what the wards should look like.

Alongside the new hospital, Alder Hey has also built an innovative Research and Education Facility. The new facility will place Alder Hey and Liverpool as a national and international leader in the development of safer and more effective medicines for children and young people. The new facility will allow researchers and clinicians to work with industry to develop safer, better medicines and therapies for children to use in the NHS and throughout the world.

Alder Hey Children’s Charity is helping to transform this NHS hospital into a world-class facility. The Charity has already raised over £20m towards the new hospital, providing lifesaving equipment, funding for vital research and patient experience initiatives. Alder Hey Children’s Charity continues to raise much needed funds to create a truly patient friendly environment and support cutting edge innovation and research.

 

Alder Hey is one of the UK and Europe’s largest children’s hospitals and celebrated its centenary last

New Alder Hey Hospital Liverpool. Images by Gareth Jones

New Alder Hey Hospital Liverpool.
Images by Gareth Jones

year. During its 101 year history, the hospital has led the way in a number of significant medical breakthroughs and advancements including being the first hospital to test Penicillin, saving a child from pneumonia in 1944; the first hospital to establish a neonatal unit in the UK; the first to cure the UK’s most commonly encountered congenital heart defect; as well as pioneering various splints and appliances including the Thomas Splint.

The move to the new building has been meticulously planned over the past 18 months to ensure a safe and smooth transition for Alder Hey patients and their families. All non-emergency activity during the move to the new hospital will be reduced. However, the hospital’s Emergency Department will remain open, officially relocating to its new home in the early hours of Sunday 4th October.

As a specialist hospital, Alder Hey currently provides 275,000 episodes of care to children and young people every year as one of Europe’s biggest and busiest centres of excellence for children with cancer, heart, spinal and brain disease.

Watch this video for a sneak peak of the new Alder Hey hospital’s state of the art facilities.

We interviewed Rick Turnick of Alder Hey to tell us more.

PATIENTTALK.ORG Can you tell me a little bit about the history of the hospital?

Rick Turnick – The old hospital was built in 1914 so it’s just over 100 years old. Originally as a children’s hospital but then during both the 1st World War and the 2nd World War we took injured soldiers as well. Obviously since the 2nd World War it’s been a children’s hospital. It’s grown into one of the biggest and busiest in the UK and Europe. During that time we were the first children’s hospital to use penicillin. We were the first children’s hospital worldwide to develop general anaesthesia safely in children and the first in the world to have a purpose built unit to deal with surgery and new born babies.

PATIENTTALK.ORG What is the role of the charity?

New Alder Hey Hospital Liverpool. Images by Gareth Jones

New Alder Hey Hospital Liverpool.
Images by Gareth Jones

Rick Turnick – The charity’s technically a separate organization although it’s housed within the building, both the old one and the new one but the new hospital has been funded mainly through NHS money. What the charity does is they are able to enhance the facilities, so for instance we’ve developed a system of ward based chefs in the new hospital so the children will have bespoke meals cooked for them when they want them, things that they want to eat , we’ve been able to upgrade the beds that we are able to provide, both the ordinary beds in the main ward but also on the critical care unit, they’ve helped us make sure that our operating theatres are absolutely cutting edge and they have helped with developing systems within the operating theatres and also other things like our hydrotherapy pool, the garden that’s both outside and inside the new hospital and the sort of entertainment we are able to offer the children in their cubicles and outside as well, the arts program.

PATIENTTALK.ORG And who will the hospitals serve?

Rick Turnick – Well we have all the children’s beds for the north Liverpool north Merseyside complex so that’s children who are just local with acute illnesses but we also serve a regional population in north west of England but we take patients from all over the UK we take patients from Ireland, we take patients from other parts of Europe and further afield as well.

PATIENTTALK.ORG Why a children’s hospital rather than one for all ages?

Rick Turnick – Well children have different diseases from adults so the reason for a children’s hospital rather than an adult or all ages one means that we can make sure that the environment is safe and effective for their treatment, it means that we can shape the whole ethos and ambiance of the hospital around children and their families rather than having it as a sort of bolt on extra to an adult type hospital.

PATIENTTALK.ORG How will the new building improve healthcare?

Rick Turnick – Well it will improve healthcare by the fact we have been able too not only make everything cutting edge technology at the top end but also that we are able to ensure that our patient flows work properly and the other main factor is when you are working in a 100 year old building keeping it clean just is a mammoth task and at the new hospital we’ve designed it so that infection control and prevention will be one of our key strategies to really nail them and get it absolutely the best.

PATIENTTALK.ORG What conditions will be treated?

Rick Turnick – The conditions that we treat will be everything that a child might have the misfortune to suffer from, from the usual sort of respiratory tract problems that occur in winter through to the most severe forms of cancer, children’s heart surgery, to treating tiny babies, a whole range of children will be treated at Alder Hey.

PATIENTTALK.ORG And what’s the difference between a children’s ICU and a normal ICU?
Rick Turnick – With children’s ICU again its dealing with different diseases so everything is focused, the staff are trained in the treatment of different illnesses, the equipment’s has to be scaled up or down because we treat everything from tiny new-born babies weighing a couple of pounds through to adolescents who are sort of adults sized so it’s got to be much more flexible then an adult ICU and the range of illnesses that you deal with on a children’s ICU is very, very wide as opposed to an adult ICU where you really only have fewer conditions that you have to treat.

PATIENTTALK.ORG And last and final question, what are the current research projects?

Rick Turnick – The current research projects will be focused around our adjacent new research & education building, we host the NAHR medicines for children’s program for the whole of the UK, we’ve got research projects in every area of children’s medicine but practically through our cancer, our oncology, that’s been very strong. hydro therapy pool Orthopaedics, neurosurgery, rheumatology really everything. We want to weave research through the whole hospital in everything we do.

A new way of detecting serious illness in children up for an award.


Academy of Fab NHS Stuff

Academy of Fab NHS Stuff

Dr Damian Roland, Consultant in Paediatric Emergency Medicine for Leicester’s Hospitals, has been nominated as a potential overall Academy Winner for 2015 by the Academy of Fab NHS Stuff.

On 26 November, Roland will find out if he has been announced as the overall winner in a celebration of ‘Fabness’ hosted by health writer and commentator, Roy Lilley in London.

Dr Roland is a previous winner of an Academy of Fab NHS Stuff award for his work creating ‘POPS’ (Paediatric Observation Priority Score); a scoring system used in the Paediatric Emergency Department which helps to improve detection of serious illness and aid in safe discharge for acutely ill children.

In conjunction with Dr Ffion Davies, clinical lead for the Paediatric Emergency Department at Leicester’s Hospitals, Dr Roland came up with the idea from scratch in 2008 when, as a trainee, he discovered that there were problems in communication when quantifying how sick the children were he was treating. This led to research into his project which has really developed over the last 3 to 4 years and is used across Leicester’s Hospitals. It has now been expanded to NHS Hospitals in Derby, Mansfield, Bristol, Gloucester and Reading.


Dr Roland explains: “I originally submitted POPS to the academy initially as a way to spread the word as I have the copyright but there is no licencing fee for it. I would like to see the system rolled out around the country and am extremely proud to see it being used by other NHS trusts.”

Social media has played a big role in promoting Dr Roland’s projects, having had his idea for POPS retweeted on Twitter over 100 times, and he has since developed an app on which the POPS system can be used. He is also one of the core team for NHS Change Day, which uses social media to share thousands of pledges of action.

More important for Dr Roland than winning the overall Academy winner title, will be meeting like-minded individuals at the Fab NHS Stuff event in London to exchange ideas. Commenting on the event in London, Dr Roland said: “I want it to draw a good analogy between the concept of NHS Change Day and the Academy in that it provides a great opportunity for similar people to share good ideas as it is a repository for good ideas.”

Sarah Remington, of IBM, has worked alongside Damian on POPS and said: “IBM, through our partnership with the Trust, worked with Dr Damian Roland on his work to develop POPS, providing an analytical capability to prove that the scores being recorded were an accurate representation of the patient’s outcome. This was a great opportunity to demonstrate the benefits of combining IBM’s experience in data and analytics with the Trust’s leading edge clinical thinking and one that we are developing as the critical mass of data continues to grow.”

Child mortality rates plunge by more than half since 1990 but global MDG target missed by wide margin


16,000 children under 5 years old die each day

Child mortality rates have plummeted to less than half of what they were in 1990,

Child mortality rates

Child mortality rates

according to a new report released today. Under-five deaths have dropped from 12.7 million per year in 1990 to 5.9 million in 2015. This is the first year the figure has gone below the 6 million mark.

New estimates in Levels and Trends in Child Mortality Report 2015 released by UNICEF, the World Health Organization, the World Bank Group, and the Population Division of UNDESA, indicate that although the global progress has been substantial, 16,000 children under five still die every day. And the 53 per cent drop in under-five mortality is not enough to meet the Millennium Development Goal of a two-thirds reduction between 1990 and 2015.

“We have to acknowledge tremendous global progress, especially since 2000 when many countries have tripled the rate of reduction of under-five mortality,” said UNICEF Deputy Executive Director Geeta Rao Gupta. “But the far too large number of children still dying from preventable causes before their fifth birthday – and indeed within their first month of life – should impel us to redouble our efforts to do what we know needs to be done. We cannot continue to fail them.”


The report notes that the biggest challenge remains in the period at or around birth. A massive 45 per cent of under-five deaths occur in the neonatal period – the first 28 days of life. Prematurity, pneumonia, complications during labour and delivery, diarrhoea, sepsis, and malaria are leading causes of deaths of children under 5 years old. Nearly half of all under-five deaths are associated with undernutrition.

However, most child deaths are easily preventable by proven and readily available interventions. The rate of reduction of child mortality can speed up considerably by concentrating on regions with the highest levels – sub-Saharan Africa and Southern Asia – and ensuring a targeted focus on newborns.

“We know how to prevent unnecessary newborn mortality. Quality care around the time of childbirth including simple affordable steps like ensuring early skin-to-skin contact, exclusive breastfeeding and extra care for small and sick babies can save thousands of lives every year,”  noted Dr Flavia Bustreo, Assistant Director General at WHO. “The Global Strategy for Women’s, Children’s and Adolescents’ Health, to be launched at the UN General Assembly this month, will be a major catalyst for giving all newborns the best chance at a healthy start in life.”

The report highlights that a child’s chance of survival is still vastly different based on where he or she is born. Sub-Saharan Africa has the highest under-five mortality rate in the world with 1 child in 12 dying before his or her fifth birthday – more than 12 times higher than the 1 in 147 average in high-income countries. In 2000-2015, the region has overall accelerated its annual rate of reduction of under-five mortality to about two and a half times what it was in 1990-2000. Despite low incomes, Eritrea, Ethiopia, Liberia, Madagascar, Malawi, Mozambique, Niger, Rwanda, Uganda, and Tanzania have all met the MDG target.

Sub-Saharan Africa as a whole, however, continues to confront the immense challenge of a burgeoning under-five population – projected to increase by almost 30 per cent in the next 15 years – coupled with persistent poverty in many countries.

“This new report confirms a key finding of the 2015 Revision of the World Population Prospects on the remarkable decline in child mortality globally during the 15-year MDG era,” said UN Under-Secretary-General for Economic and Social Affairs Mr. Wu Hongbo. “Rapid improvements since 2000 have saved the lives of millions of children. However, this progress will need to continue and even accelerate further, especially in high-mortality countries of sub-Saharan Africa, if we are to reach the proposed child survival target of the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development.”

“Many countries have made extraordinary progress in cutting their child mortality rates. However, we still have much to do before 2030 to ensure that all women and children have access to the care they need,” said Dr Tim Evans, Senior Director of Health, Nutrition and Population at the World Bank Group. “The recently launched Global Financing Facility in Support of Every Woman Every Child with its focus on smarter, scaled and sustainable financing will help countries deliver essential health services and accelerate reductions in child mortality.”

Among the report’s findings:

  • Roughly one-third of the world’s countries – 62 in all – have actually met the MDG target to reduce under-five mortality by two-thirds, while another 74 have reduced rates by at least half.
  • The world as a whole has been accelerating progress in reducing under-five mortality – its annual rate of reduction increased from 1.8 per cent in 1990-2000 to 3.9 per cent in 2000-2015.
  • 10 of the 12 low income countries which have reduced under-five mortality rates by at least two-thirds are in Africa.
  • 5 in 10 global under-five deaths occur in sub-Saharan Africa and another 3 in 10 occur in Southern Asia.
  • 45 per cent of all under-five deaths happen during the first 28 days of life. 1 million neonatal deaths occur on the day of birth, and close to 2 million children die in the first week of life.

How to satisfy your pregnancy cravings the right way – and lessen your child’s chance of obesity or diabetes


Childhood obesity and diabetes

Childhood obesity and diabetes

Recent research has found that women should ensure they are not overweight or obese during pregnancy as it could increase their child’s risk of developing diabetes later in life.

But anyone who has been pregnant will tell you that sometimes you’ve simply got to give in to those pregnancy cravings.

Ice-cream is one of those foods that many mums-to-be can’t get enough of, so to make sure you don’t miss out, we’ve come up with an alternative way to get your ice-cream fix with our low GI ice-cream recipe.

Nutritionist and chef, Christine Bailey shows us just how easy and nutritious ice-cream can be with a few fresh ingredients.


This recipe is rich and creamy but low in calories thanks to the 0 calorie stevia sweetener, and the berry and mint combination keeps it refreshingly light for the taste buds. Use the season’s brightest berries to make this dairy free, gluten free recipe high in flavour.

It’s the perfect sweet treat for mums to be.

Helping a disabled child with a better experience at school – this is a great infographic


Disabled children end up facing a lot more issues in school due to a lack of awareness among staff and non-disabled peers. Bullying is a common complaint voiced by disabled children, sometimes even as young as seven years old. However, this situation can be easily rectified by making sure that schools have proper access and mobility equipment, teachers are trained in special needs education, educating non-disabled children in equality, tolerance and diversity. For more information on how to improve the life of a disabled child at school, check out this below infographic from UKSMobility.


Helping a disabled child with a better experience at school

Helping a disabled child with a better experience at school