We look at hospital rebuilding, 20 years ago

Archive image from 1997

Wasting disease

Twenty years ago, plans to rebuild 鈥渃rumbling concrete鈥 hospitals thrown up after the Second World War were stalling and then, as now, the health service was suffering from a lack of funding from central government, writes Helen Burch.
The government鈥檚 pledge to sign 拢500m of PFI deals to rebuild hospitals by April 1997 was in danger of not being met, with construction industry money being spent but no progress being made. So 黑洞社区 launched its 鈥淯ntie the PFI鈥 campaign, asking readers to sign a letter to then-health secretary Stephen Dorrell to put pressure on him to move the scheme forward.

Giles Barrie鈥檚 article focused dramatically on Princess Margaret Hospital in Swindon, describing problems including 鈥渃oncrete cancer, windows that cause overheating in the summer and health and fire safety difficulties,鈥 with a visitor from a top-20 contractor concluding: 鈥淚t is not an environment to make people feel better.鈥

Eventually, the Princess Margaret Hospital was one of the first hospitals to be replaced under the PFI initiative, at a cost of 拢148m with Carillion as lead contractor. The new facility, Great Western Hospital, opened in 2002.

To read the full article from 7 February 1992, download the PDF below

 

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