Checkit donates medical monitoring technology to NHS Nightingale hospitals

Published: 8-Apr-2020

Medical monitoring system protects vital medical equipment for temperature variations

Checkit is donating technology to support the rapid set-up and safe operation of NHS Nightingale hospitals across the UK.

The Cambridge-based company has installed its Tutela medical monitoring system at the first Nightingale hospital, which opened on Friday at ExCeL London, directly contributing to the provision of urgent care to Covid-19 patients.

The system will help protect critical assets from temperature variations, reduce the manual burden on staff, and maintain the highest storage standards in accordance with CQC and HTA requirements.

A team of Checkit engineers was mobilised in a matter of hours to design and install the system.

The company is now discussing similar deployments with Nightingale Hospital North West, which is under development at the Manchester Central conference centre; and the Midlands Nightingale being set up at Birmingham NEC. This will ensure critical medicines, reagents and samples are protected from potentially-damaging temperature variations.

Digital tools are proving to be an invaluable resource in enabling the courageous and dedicated NHS workforce to rapidly meet the unprecedented demands being placed upon them

The company is also offering to donate its advanced monitoring technology to further Nightingale hospitals planned for Harrogate Convention Centre and the University of West England, in Bristol.

Keith Daley, executive chairman of Checkit, said: “We have a long-standing relationship with the NHS, having installed technology at over 185 hospitals in the UK so we didn’t think twice about offering our unconditional support to the field hospitals being established in record time to help the country cope with the scale of the Covid-19 crisis.

“Digital tools are proving to be an invaluable resource in enabling the courageous and dedicated NHS workforce to rapidly meet the unprecedented demands being placed upon them. In this extraordinary period, we must all stand together. Collaboration is key.”

Phil Douglas, operations manager, added: “Our engineering team acted without hesitation in providing UKAS-calibrated sensors at short notice.

“They worked closely with the local NHS IT team to connect to the secure network and ensure all points were monitored in real time. <’p>

“We are pleased to have had the opportunity to provide direct assistance that will help the heroic medical teams who are caring for patients around the clock.”

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