A NUMBER of urgent outpatient clinics are set to reopen next week as Wye Valley NHS Trust takes the first steps to restart some services which have been put on hold since the start of the coronavirus pandemic.

Along with hospitals across the UK, the trust suspended a range of outpatient clinics and postponed routine surgery to make sure it had the resources ready to cope with patients who had contracted Covid-19.

While this meant a reduction in many services, patients needing urgent care like treatment in the Emergency Department, cancer treatment and some urgent outpatient treatment, continued to receive care.

Three months on, the trust is getting ready to reopen a number of urgent outpatient clinics starting from June 1, and aims to begin carrying out some elective surgery in the coming weeks.

The hospital will continue to treat new Covid-19 patients as well as carrying out other emergency work.

This will mean there are social distancing and infection prevention measures in place, including an assessment area at the front of the hospital to carry out temperature checks on patients for Covid-19 as they arrive and patients will be provided with a face mask, unless they have one of their own.

Patients are asked to arrive no earlier than 15 minutes prior to their booked appointment time and attend on their own.

If this is not possible, patients may bring only one friend or relative where they require assistance. Children under 16 are not allowed, unless the patient is a child. There may be situations in the clinic setting where a relative or friend is asked to wait outside the clinic room whilst a consultation takes place.

For patients attending for elective surgery, the trust is requesting that they self-isolate for two weeks prior to their operation. They will be tested for Covid-19 prior to their procedure to ensure they don’t bring the virus onto the hospital’s wards.

Patients who are tested positive for coronavirus when they arrive may face having their appointment postponed.

The general advice to patients remains that if they have symptoms of coronavirus - high temperature, a new, continuous cough, and/or loss of taste/smell – please do not attend hospitals/clinics and contact NHS111 for advice.

“These are standard procedures which are being adopted by many hospitals. They’re measures which will help keep people safe and ensure the risk of them catching coronavirus at the hospital is minimised. However, this is a new way of working which patients will not have experienced before when using our services,” said Jon Barnes, chief operating officer at WVT.

“The safety of patients is our priority and we have a great Infection Prevention Team to ensure we’re all complying with the latest guidance and regulations to keep our staff and those we’re caring for as safe as possible”.

“It will take us many months until we get back to anything like the level of activity that we managed prior to the outbreak.

“Things are very different now – we’ve been working hard to ensure that patients don’t need to come into hospital unless it’s absolutely necessary through video consultations between medics and patients.

“This will be the new way of working and we’re sure our patients will adapt to these new processes quickly.”