Health Infrastructure is redeveloping Wyong Hospital to deliver a new expanded, state-of-the-art facility for the Central Coast community.
OVERVIEW
The Wyong Hospital Redevelopment will significantly increase health capacity on the Central Coast and meet the growing healthcare needs of the community.
The redevelopment has delivered a new hospital building, including a new and expanded Emergency Department and Intensive Care Unit. It also involved the refurbishment of parts of the existing hospital, including an additional operating theatre and three new recovery bays.
The final stage of works underway include the expansion of the Cancer Day Unit and refurbishment and expansion of pathology, women’s health, medical officer workspace accommodation and a new Aboriginal health unit and carers support unit.
The project will improve the patient experience by providing residents access to more health services closer to home, which will enable them to remain near family, friends and existing support networks.
The NSW Government is investing $200 million to redevelop Wyong Hospital, plus a further $6.4 million to expand the Wyong Cancer Day Unit.
BENEFITS
The project will:
- Meet the growing health needs of the Central Coast community by providing an additional 60 inpatient beds as well as future expansion space
- Improve patient health outcomes through enhanced emergency, intensive care, ambulatory care, medical imaging and inpatient services
- Increase surgical capacity with an additional operating theatre and recovery bays
- Provide greater short stay and single day procedures with increased bed capacity and treatment bays
- Improve patient experience by providing the community access to more health services closer to home, which will enable them to remain near family, friends and existing support networks
- Provide patients, families and carers a contemporary facility to meet the health needs of the Wyong community now, and into the future.
SCOPE
The project includes:
- A new Emergency Department with 12 more treatment spaces and one additional resuscitation bay
- A new Intensive Care Unit, with an additional treatment space
- A new ambulatory paediatric unit with four more bed spaces for short stay patients
- A new and expanded medical imaging department with a new CT scanner, X-ray machine, procedure room and MRI
- A new and expanded 28-bed medical assessment unit with eight more beds
- Additional 60 inpatient beds
- Additional operating theatre and three recovery bays
- Additional eight treatment bays in the medical day unit
- Additional seven bed bays in the transit lounge and larger waiting room
- Expansion of the Cancer Day Unit.
- Refurbishment of existing vacated space for an expanded pathology, women’s health and medical officer working accommodation, and a new Aboriginal health unit and carers support unit.