'There IS a demand for PEH hydrotherapy pool'
ACCESS to the hospital's hydrotherapy pool was so restricted islanders were virtually blocked from treatment, according to users.
ACCESS to the hospital's hydrotherapy pool was so restricted islanders were virtually blocked from treatment, according to users.
A STATE-OF-THE-ART hydrotherapy pool at the hospital cost almost £200,000 to build, Health and Social Services has revealed.
A STATE-OF-THE-ART hydrotherapy pool at the hospital has been lying idle for more than a year, it has been revealed.
UP TO £4m. could be spent on two temporary wards if HSSD gets States approval for a major redevelopment of the hospital, the department's corporate services director has said.
A REINTRODUCTION of buses going to the PEH hospital main entrance and improved round-island services are some of the changes being introduced as part of CT Plus' new summer timetable.
HANDICAPPED and elderly patients are bearing the brunt of healthcare cutbacks, a St Luke's day care centre user has said.
MANY will applaud the news that the States Assembly and Constitution Committee (Sacc) is to look at the whole issue of the compatibility of deputies' business and other interests with their role as people's representatives.
A HOSPITAL ward that closed earlier this week due to an outbreak of diarrhoea and vomiting has now reopened.
A PARTY for residents was held yesterday ahead of the forthcoming closure of the King Edward VII Hospital.
WHAT an excellent feature the Press did on breast cancer specialist Stuart Scott recently.
STAR scrum-half Malcolm Barnes suffered a locked dislocation with a fractured vertebrae in his neck during Guernsey's excellent win over Dorking.
PERVERSE, dysfunctional and very expensive – if the PEH efficiency report published this week was critical, its authors yesterday took condemnation of HSSD's unique system to a new level.
FEW reports commissioned by the States, if any, can have been released with more of a raspberry than a trumpet fanfare.
AN INDEPENDENT review into HSSD has said the department could save between £6m. and £9m. a year by changing the way services are delivered.