Teesside trust still under pressure as it continues to treat 80 covid-19 patients
At the height of the first wave, the trust peaked at around 80 covid patients
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The chief nurse of a trust in North East England has urged the public to continue to follow coronavirus guidelines, warning “we are not out of the woods
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Eight excellent whiskies costing less than £100.
Hundreds of new whiskies are launched every year – some from young distilleries, others from established names introducing new core bottlings or releasing limited edition products.
Keeping up with this perpetual conveyor belt is even harder when you factor in all the countries now making their own whiskies and giving the old guard something to think about. Name a country – Australia? India? Denmark? South Africa? – and you can pretty much guarantee that it’s making some decent drams these days.
Staff at the North Tees and Hartlepool NHS Foundation Trust A TEESSIDE health care trust has appealed to their staff to ‘keep talking and keep caring for one another’ after enduring one of the most pressured winters they have ever experienced. North Tees and Hartlepool NHS Foundation Trust bosses have issued the rallying cry after becoming one of the hardest hit hospitals with Covid patients during the second wave of the pandemic. At the height of their admissions they had over 200 Covid patients in comparison to highs of around 76 in the first wave. Chief nurse, Lindsey Robertson said: Our staff, and indeed all key workers across the country had such a challenging year last year, and continue to face enormous challenges.
University Hospital of North Tees, Stockton A HOSPITAL boss has sounded worries of a “third wave” of coronavirus cases as a Teesside trust faces high demand in the run up to Christmas. North Tees and Hartlepool NHS Trust saw a peak of 78 covid patients on its wards during the first wave. Although treatments have improved since, teams at North Tees are now caring for more than 160 Covid patients – with almost half of all beds taken up by those suffering from the virus. And there are fears allowing up to three households to meet between December 23 and December 27 will put further strain on staff and capacity in the new year.