Lee making progress towards building new General Hospital

World Bank project leaders together with Hospital Tripartite members during a recent meeting.

 PHILIPSBURG--Minister of Public Health Emil Lee says World Bank representatives are currently working on the Project Appraisal Document (PAD), which is mandatory for the funding grant of US $25 million for the new General Hospital for St. Maarten project.

The project includes the funds for strengthening of the new hospital building design to meet post-Hurricane Irma specifications, to ensure continuity of care during the worst of disasters, and the transition of the current building and staff from now through commissioning of the new building. Lee reported on the progress of the St. Maarten Hospital Resilience and Preparedness Project during Wednesday’s Council of Ministers’ press briefing.

World Bank project leaders Carolyn Shelton (Senior Operations Officer and Task Team Leader for this project) and Marcelo Bortman (Lead Health Specialist and Task Team Leader for this project) oversee drafting the PAD. The Tripartite commission for the new General Hospital, consisting of SZV, government and St. Maarten Medical Center (SMMC) recently gave the World Bank project leaders a presentation on the new hospital plans and a tour of the current facility. The PAD is expected to be completed by the end of June.

“I certainly think they see the need for a new hospital and the resilience plan for the current hospital. We are happy that they are here to get a first-hand impression and to work on the document,” said Lee on Wednesday. The requested funding of US $25 million will allow for the reinstatement of the additional wing to the new General Hospital plans, reinforcing the current SMMC facility to meet category-four hurricane wind speeds and other upgrades to the facility.

The construction of the new hospital is delayed due to the country’s post-Irma status. Because of this, all parties are ensuring that the necessary upgrades to SMMC will be possible, to ensure that SMMC can continue to service the community with proper quality and patient safety measures in place, during the extended period.

The engineers are currently working on the redesign of the building itself and are projected to be able to submit the new designs to the Ministry of Public Housing, Spatial Planning, Environment and Infrastructure VROMI by the end of July.

“We see that the World Bank shares our philosophy of incorporating quality standards and making sure that we are working towards international standards. This is an important part of building back better. It is an important part of resilience. If we want the project to be sustainable, it needs to be economically sustainable, for that to happen. The hospital has to be built with international-quality standards both physically as well as the services that we provide,” stated Lee.

The Daily Herald

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