Wednesday, 30 May 2012

Louise Hamilton Centre taking shape

Steelwork really taking shape on the centre




























How the centre will look when finished

New end-of-life supportive care centre named after Norfolk woman




Great Yarmouth and Waveney’s new palliative information and supportive care centre will be named after Gorleston-born woman Louise Hamilton (pictured above).

A public consultation asking for suitable names for the new centre, currently being built at the James Paget University Hospital, revealed the popular choice.


Louise was born in Gorleston in 1969 and was a pupil at Wroughton and Lynn Grove schools before she went to Bristol University and graduated with a degree in languages.


At the age of just 26 Louise found she had breast cancer. She sadly passed away at the age of 28. While Louise was living with her cancer she had found the help offered to her by the Bristol Cancer Help Centre to be enormously beneficial.


Louise’s Mum, Roberta Lovick, of Potter Heigham, was inspired by Louise’s experience of a supportive care and information centre in Bristol to start fundraising for a similar centre for people in Great Yarmouth and Waveney. Roberta’s experience with her daughter Louise helped inspire the launch of the Palliative Care East appeal back in 2006.
  
The new Palliative Care East funded-centre will be called the Louise Hamilton Centre. The centre will open in December this year and is expected to be used by 10,000 people a year.


Roberta said: “It was just so emotional finding out the centre would be named after Louise. I’m very touched that so many people put her name forward. It was my dream to have this kind of service locally and now it’s almost hard to believe it’s actually happening. 


“This type of centre has been needed for so long and I’d like to thank people from the bottom of my heart for donating and helping make it happen. We still need donations to make it all happen and keep it running.”

The Palliative Care East appeal was launched in 2006 and the latest round of local fundraising has brought the total to within just £100,000 of its £1.5 million target.


The Palliative Care East-funded Louise Hamilton Centre is being designed by Norwich-based LSI Architects who have designed the central space as a dramatic curving shape resembling an upturned boat - a reminder of the scheme's seaside context and of the notion of an 'ark' as a place of refuge. 


The  centre and outreach service is a partnership between NHS Norfolk and Waveney, local county councils and the voluntary sector; including funds from the Palliative Care East appeal.  


The new centre and outreach service will be based at the James Paget University Hospital, Gorleston, and will bring together a wide range of organisations that can help support patients who are living with a life-limiting illness and also help their loved ones. 


The service will offer patients and carers a one-stop-shop service for information and supportive services. The centre will not have beds but will offer a “home from home” environment offering; access to specialist palliative care advice, counselling, bereavement services, complementary therapies, welfare advice, information and about life-limiting illnesses.


The Louise Hamilton Centre at JPUH will operate as a hub for information and support services with services also provided on an outreach basis. The organisations working together on improvements to palliative care and support locally are:

•           James Paget University Hospital
•           NHS Norfolk and Waveney
•           HealthEast
•           St Elizabeth Hospice
•           Big C
•           Macmillan Cancer Support
•           Cruse Bereavement Care
•           Marie Curie Cancer Care
•           Crossroads Care
•           Norfolk County Council
•           Suffolk County Council 

Wednesday, 16 May 2012

Steel frame going up for the new centre




Building work on the new Palliative Care East information and supportive care centre is well underway and patients and visitors to the James Paget University Hospital can now see the centre's steelwork frame rapidly taking shape.

Suffolk-based ISG is building the £1.5 million Palliative Care East information and supportive care centre at the James Paget University Hospital.ISG started preliminary work on site today with the building due to be completed in December 2012. The architects are Norwich-based LSI Architects.

The Palliative Care East (PCE) appeal was launched in 2006 and the aim of the appeal is to provide Great Yarmouth and Waveney with a stunning information centre that will help people with incurable illnesses such as cancer, respiratory, neurological, and cardiac diseases.

The new centre will host a range of information and supportive care services provided by a wide range of organisations working in partnership: from the NHS, to local cancer charities, patient support groups, and bereavement groups. The centre will not provide palliative care beds.

The centre will be about living life. Many people need help to live as full a life as possible when they have an incurable condition. The centre will provide them with access to advice and support and will also signpost them to appropriate community services.