Cancer services in East Devon will receive a major boost this month.
Ottery St Mary Hospital will become a new cancer hub for patients and their families.
Specialists from the Royal Devon & Exeter Hospital’s oncology department and FORCE, the area’s leading cancer support charity, will be working together within a dedicated unit at the Keegan Road site.
Access to potentially life-saving treatments will be among the new services available in Ottery with chemotherapy sessions held there for the first time.
The new cancer unit will open for one day a week from this Friday (November 20) but the plan is to increase services to five days a week, Monday to Friday, when staffing levels allow.
“The decision was therefore made to consolidate existing outreach into one location, which allowed us to expand, bringing alongside key services such as clinics, FORCE, the Living with and Beyond Cancer programme and enhanced supportive care,” said the RD&E’s lead cancer nurse Tina Grose.
FORCE Chief Executive Meriel Fishwick added: “‘We are so very grateful to the people of Honiton, especially our wonderful volunteers, for their support of FORCE and the outreach chemotherapy service since it started in October 2018. The accommodation in Ottery St Mary hospital will allow the range of cancer services to expand and FORCE is now planning how it will offer support and information services alongside patients’ vital cancer treatment.”
COVID-19 brought some disruption to the RD&E’s delivery of chemotherapy in the wider community. The service, which uses experienced nurses from the RD&E’s Cherrybrook chemotherapy unit paid for by FORCE, continued in Okehampton and temporarily increased to two days a week in Honiton.
A short-term suspension of chemo sessions in Tiverton is due to end this month. FORCE has worked closely with the RD&E to help with the transition from Honiton to Ottery.
The charity hopes to mirror many of the services it offers at its main centre in Exeter at the new East Devon hub.
These could include counselling, complementary therapies, advice and information sessions, physiotherapy and exercise clinics.
It is hoped that volunteers from FORCE will also be involved when COVID-19 restrictions allow.
Counsellors, information nurses, a dedicated benefits advisor and oncology physiotherapist helped hundreds dealing with a cancer diagnosis via phone and video calls.
The FORCE Support and Information Centre in the grounds of the RD&E is now open again with COVID secure measures in place.
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