Welcome... |
Latest... |
||||||||||||
Would you like to challenge yourself? If so, why not take part in a Sponsored Charity Abseil from the top of the Women’s Centre on March 28th 2010. We need at least 20 volunteers to take part in this daring event. Silver Star’s Struggle to Survive, written by Nuala Webb, mother and passionate supporter of Silver Star.The annual Silver Star Fete on 27th June this year turned out to be rather disturbing. The normal chit-chat, raffles and baby adoration sessions were undermined by the bombshell that Level 6 – the Silver Star Ward for high risk pregnancies and foetal medicine was to be closed on Monday 6th July for good. Although details were blurry and rumours abounding, what did seem clear was that staff were told verbally on 25th and 26th about the indefinite closure of Level 6, with under 2 weeks warning. The atmosphere was one of disbelief, anger, shock and outrage among the Silver Star families and in- patients, who had come down for the fete. READ MORE What is the Silver Star Unit?The Silver Star Unit is a small team of dedicated staff who provide high level care to those mothers who have major troubles during their pregnancies often affecting the health and safety of both mother and baby. These problems are not due to infertility, but to many other conditions including repeated miscarriage or other pregnancy losses from pre-eclampsia(sometimes known as ‘toxemia of pregnancy’), placental bleeding or other placental problems. Women with kidney disease, high blood pressure, diabetes and other medical complications also receive help at the Silver Star Unit. You may think that every hospital has such a Unit, but the Silver Star Unit is unique to the John Radcliffe Hospital in Oxford. Nowhere else will you find the same combination of skills and staff focused exclusively on the needs of a small but highly vulnerable group of pregnant women. For this reason, the Silver Star Unit is internationally recognised for its’ work and organisation. Oxford’s nationally acclaimed Unit, which saves the lives and prevents the suffering of many mothers and babies, has two sides: The Clinical Side Doctors from all over the world come to train alongside Professors’ Christopher Redman, and Ian Sargent at Oxford. Women come from miles around to benefit from the expertise offered at
the Silver Star Unit, some from the east and south coasts, Cornwall, Wales,
Birmingham, London and even from overseas to ensure that they and their
babies are given the very best care before birth to ensure the
best possible outcome. What is the Silver Star Society?The Silver Star Society is a group of grateful parents who got together
in 1987 to help support the Unit. Although, never a large group, the Society
has been extraordinarily effective in raising money to buy much needed
equipment, vital to the Unit’s work, which could not otherwise have
been afforded. This has improved the facilities phenomenally over the
years, by supplying equipment that the NHS is not able to afford. In 1990-91 a staggering £180,000 was raised for the purchase of the First Silver Star Flow Cytometer, a highly specialised piece of equipment which is central to the Research Team’s work. Ten years later, a new Flow-cytometer was bought, funded by grants, to which the Silver Star Society provided a crucial £50,000. Silver Star Society’s Aims:To make things better for Silver Star mothers and their families. To raise money to keep the Unit well equipped, to improve the comfort and amenities for women during their stay at the Silver Star Unit, and to support research into important problems of pregnancy’. Thanks to everyone, the Society does a good job in realising all these aims! The Silver Star Unit is unique in that staff, parents and scientists work together to help raise funds. Silver Star Unit E mail:silverstar.society@orh.nhs.uk
|
|
||||||||||||
Women’s Centre, John Radcliffe Hospital, Oxford |