A hospice charity that aims to build a palliative care centre for the Great Yarmouth and Waveney area has launched a joint consultation on its future plans.
East Coast Hospice (ECH) wants to build the ten-bed Margaret Chadd House on the Gorleston/Hopton border.
On Thursday it was announced ECH has now teamed up with Ipswich-based St Elizabeth Hospice to create what is called an ‘achievable and sustainable palliative and end-of-life care service’ for people across Great Yarmouth and Waveney.
Discussions are now taking place between both organisations with a consultation to be launched on future joint services, with the Margaret Chadd House plans being included in the process.
ECH was formed in 2007 and had said its new palliative care centre would be open by November 2020 following a multi-million pound fundraising drive
Looking forward to the new partnership, the acting chair of ECH Bridget Low said: “The solution the parties must now devise has to be one that the community can afford to fund year on year and which fits with its current needs for palliative and hospice care.
"That may well be different from the existing plans and could involve a joint venture with a third party, the involvement of commercial partners and/or other charities and partners operating in the same area providing complementary services.
St Elizabeth Hospice has had an existing joint partnership between and East Coast Community Healthcare social enterprise since 2019.
That partnership has delivered specialist palliative care support to more than 2,700 patients and their families in Great Yarmouth and Waveney.
Chairman of St Elizabeth Hospice, Ian Turner, said: “We recognise that fundraising for sustainable hospice care is a deep commitment from volunteers and supporters.
"We have huge respect for all the East Coast Hospice supporters who have done so much already to build the funds raised to date for Great Yarmouth and Waveney.
“Our shared goal now is to make sure that those funds are put to the maximum benefit for high quality sustainable hospice care into the future for the people of Great Yarmouth and Waveney.”
MARGARET CHADD HOUSE
The late Margaret Chadd, of Southwold, worked with Dame Cicely Saunders to found the UK’s first hospice in 1967 and had been a ECH trustee.
The plans for the site are at what ECH calls stage 4, involving on-going work with mechanical and structural engineers and preparation of ground works.
In May of last year this paper reported the charity's accounts revealed it made a loss of £74,500 in the year 2019-2020 taking in the first month of the pandemic.
For more information on the work and aims of ECH visit www.eastcoasthospice.org.uk
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