Mater Hospital opens new 98-bed wing

Thursday, 20 Apr 2023

Updated / Thursday, 20 Apr 2023 22:50

By Fergal Bowers

Health Correspondent

A new 98-bed hospital wing has been officially opened at the Mater

Hospital in Dublin today.

The €103m Rock Wing includes 16 new intensive care unit beds, plus a

new National Isolation Unit.

All of the rooms are single rooms and the first patients are expected

at the end of next month, after all the systems are tested.

The new National Isolation Unit will be used for major infectious

disease cases such as Ebola and will play an important part in any

future pandemic.

The nine-storey building will treat around 5,000 patients a year.

The facility was built over two years under Covid-19 emergency

legislation and within budget and health officials say the fast-track

approach saved €40m.

Speaking on RTÉ's News at One, Professor Jim Egan, clinical director at

the Mater Hospital, said it was a model that could be replicated

elsewhere as it was conceived and completed within two years.

On staffing, he said that recruitment is a challenge, but was

progressing well and they hoped to open the beds actively in the next

few weeks.

Prof Egan said that intensive care would be opened incrementally, two

beds at a time, as it requires intensive training of staff.

He said that the National Isolation Unit would be ready in the next 12

to 24 months.

Taoiseach Leo Varadkar at the official opening of the wing today

The new wing was officially opened today by Taoiseach Leo Varadkar and

Minister for Health Stephen Donnelly.

The Mater Hospital has also been designated as one of the new major

trauma centres for Ireland to deal with life-threatening injuries and

major accidents.

The new wing will also deal with these cases.

The second major trauma centre will be at Cork University Hospital.

Other trauma units are being set up around the country for less complex

cases.