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Originally Posted by Hogie75
as I understand it, it is a parking garage.
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Good Lord no...........
As the article linked in
FarmerTom's post above states, it will be a brand new surgical suite for the Dumont Hospital.
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The surgical suite project consists of a single-storey addition with a basement totaling 10,248 sq. metres (113,870 sq. feet) and 1,281 sq. metres (14,240 sq. feet) of renovations at the north end of the hospital. The expansion will house a new surgical suite, recovery room, a day surgery unit, an intensive care unit, a step-down unit, physiotherapy and occupational therapy, central sterile reprocessing, and shipping/receiving.
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The entire $101-million surgical suite project is expected to be completed in three phases by 2019.
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This is a necessary project as the old surgical suite was out of date and had problems with mold in it's ventilation system (I believe). I'm rather surprised at the cost however - that's almost as much as the cost of the new events centre!!!
I believe the expansion will also include some space for the medical school, and for administration. Although not a parking garage
per se, there will be underground parking available underneath the new wing.
Next up for the Dumont will be the new
Centre for Precision Medicine. This will be a new $26.5M five storey building immediately adjacent to and connecting with the old Providence Building.
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It will see researchers from the Atlantic Cancer Research Institute (ACRI), the University of Moncton and its affiliated University of Sherbrooke medical school all housed under one roof, with space for animal testing and patient clinical trials.
The 40,000-square-foot, five-floor centre of excellence will focus on developing new diagnostic tools and therapeutics that are patient-specific, based on their unique molecular biomarkers and what options would be most effective for them.
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Surette expects the centre to house about 100 researchers when it opens, with room to accommodate up to about 160.
He believes the collaborative approach of the centre, not only among the three research teams housed there, but with other researchers in New Brunswick, across Canada and around the world, will help attract more researchers to set up shop.
The centre will also offer space for rent to existing or startup private research companies, along with access to its state-of-the-art equipment and animal lab with mice, he said.
The federal and provincial governments are investing $10.5 million and $5.25 million respectively through the Post-Secondary Institutions Strategic Investment Fund, while the University of Moncton and other partners are contributing an additional $10.7 million.
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http://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/new-brunsw...ancer-moncton-precision-centre-1.3727766
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Meanwhile, over at the Moncton Hospital, they are busily printing up a nifty brand new sign for the recently renamed
Dr Sheldon Rubin Oncology Clinic.
Also, they are trying to figure out what to do with the Obstetrics Department and the Maternal/Fetal Medicine program, since they had to close down the ob/gyn surgical suite because of contamination problems, and the obstetrics floor because of ventilation problems. This will cost millions of dollars to address, which Horizon Health does not currently have........
Meanwhile, ob/gyn surgeries are being conducted in the main OR, and obstetric patients have been relocated in the hospital, but the situation is not ideal. The Moncton Hospital currently has a top quality maternal/fetal medicine unit including obstetrician/gynecologists, perinatologists, neonatologists and a state of the art NICU. If the infrastructure problems in the hospital aren't addressed, all this could be put at risk because of problems with accreditation and recruitment.
I wish the provincial government put as much emphasis on the Moncton Hospital as it does the Dumont Hospital..........