Aemmmmnmmmmmmemmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmnmmmmmmmmmmmmms._____________@ Â¥ i s * ' se | f \fl& $ K A h is t k | h ‘ .‘f?‘{“ :"}} i ("s s & ~ n _ . * CA AC| ~al e . sA | . wit F ¢ t % Frane } Â¥e. ... is M y [ y ; | o > g2%: * e 45 & * xÂ¥ en Charge Nurse L Molyneux ) shows off the newly renovated resuscitation room at mmw-wm&'flwm%wm.mmmn.mmmmm t expected to reduce the overcrowding vmmmmmmmommmy b dopammmovertho_ldmrdcu!.wmwdlulobmmmmmm their best to minimize disruption the department during construction. Construction should be es : Mdbytmmaflnm.. i aes I 4 ‘;, t #+3 * , ~ t# ) i ~ s tan Kirkby photos C ‘,.81‘ & Those arriving by ambulance \!ill be brought into the hospital through a szbér;é_ eâ€";t'r;nv;;."i; Patients will be quickly assessed by nursing staff, then brought inside the department to wait for further care. And while renovations are underway, four additional tempoâ€" rary fullâ€"time nursing staff have be'gn hired to ensure efficiency. Instead, the emergency departâ€" ment was redesigned to increase efficiency and the comfort of patients. . TBE abGulafii ind â€" Prvidsdiad The foundation has raised alâ€" most $800,000 of the more than $1.2 million needed to pay for renovations. Most donations have come from area residents, rather than companies, Gamache said. Until the renovations, "people used to wait in the waiting room for two or three hours," said nurse Lynne Molyneux. With the new and more efficient set up, that time will be reduced, she added. , "That doesn‘t mean that once a nurse has seen them it won‘t take & while for a physician to see them." The renovations will not solve all prt;bel:mn. Initial pmor an nded e ncy ment mato be wnlwlï¬down b&cluae of an . acute space throughout the hospital. Gamache, director of the Kâ€"W Hospital _ Foundation. ‘They knnglw vy}mt we‘re talking about." emergency d:rlrtment at Kâ€"W Hospital are almost finished. Begun this March, renovations are scheduled for a yearâ€"end completion. tbl:ew people who have vmim emergency department in last several years would deny the need for renovations. "Everybody can relate to the emergency deâ€" partment experience," said Lenâ€" It‘s been a long haul for staff working ‘under unusual condiâ€" tions, but the renovations to the the past they have been wheeled past the waiting room. The old emergency department was designed to handle approxiâ€" mately 60 patients daily. The average is now almost 300. And it is not getting any better. :. Policies have been developed to weed out people who don‘t belong â€" suggesting they call their docâ€" tor in the morning, for instance. S‘tilli, the numbers continue to climb. ‘The ones who are being admitâ€" The construction going on arâ€" ound them has been a problem for medical staff, especially the nursesH s "Hearing what (patients are) saying has been a problem with saws and jackhammers," said Molyneux. Especially during earâ€" ly stages of renovations, calls announcing ambulances were ofâ€" ten missed. The dust has caused problems for asthmatic people "The facilities were totally inâ€" adequate for the number of paâ€" and patients with migraines have had a very bad time of it. We feel really sorry for them," Molyneux said as a workman drilled in the background. "It feels like we‘ve been doing renovations forever here, now," agreed Dr. Violet Shadd, an emergency physician. The renovations were necessary to perform quality medicine, she result, people were often juggled around. After the renovations there will be four trauma beds. The whole emergency departâ€" ment will be "one big lovely area with no big spaces to walk through," said Dr. Shadd. She cites the existence of only major "trauma bed" â€" one where patients can be properly moniâ€" tients we have through here." n 2l T T