Tuesday 18 August 2009

Mark Wright House, Edinburgh



Edinburgh was the focus of attention yesterday and not for Festival news. A milestone in care provision was reached with the official opening of the new Army Recovery Centre at Erskine's Edinburgh Home, Gilmerton.

The state of the art Army Recovery Centre, a dedicated 12 bed wing of the £8.6m Erskine Edinburgh Home, is the result of a partnership between the Army, veterans' charity Erskine and Help for Heroes who together are providing accommodation and support for soldiers wounded or injured during duty.

This is the first purpose-built Army Recovery Centre in the UK and will show the way to deliver similar services wherever the need is identified. Planning is already underway towards a second centre in Colchester.

Before this facility was available, once patients left hospital or the DMRC at Headley Court, most continued to convalesce at home. This was not a good situation for many recovering soldiers as they were immediately isolated from colleagues and those who understood their physical and mental needs. Soldiers will gain from a structured military environment close to existing garrison facilities, including care and rehabilitation, a gym, career management and counseling.

The centre will also cater for families as they support their loved ones.

Chief of Staff, General Sir Richard Dannatt, attended the opening. Gordon Brown was not present even though he is on holiday just over the Forth and about half an hour's drive from Gilmerton.

Help for Heroes has provided the funding for the centre, Erskine will provide the facilities management and hotel services for the building, whilst the Army will staff the centre with military personnel to carry out the care and rehabilitation.

I am delighted the first home of this kind has been opened in Scotland. It certainly saves families journeys of hundreds of miles to visit their loved ones. England is deserving too of course and the Colchester centre will be opened as soon as possible - of that I have no doubt. Let us not forget, this centre has been planned by experienced military charities and not by politicians.

8 comments:

CrazyDaisy said...

SR,

Nice to see Dannatt doing his duty, unlike the PM. Mind you did we want it politicised by The Broon? I think not, it would have been spun one way or another by NuLiebore.

Have a fine one, 29 degs domani!

CD

The Last Of The Few said...

Yes nice to see this place open.
Good luck guys.
Yes and i can confirm that the bugger has not moved out of his house as the bloddy plod firearm units have crawled over the village all week.

subrosa said...

I must make an effort and visit CD. Let's not forget it's the public who made it possible.

18 degrees and wet. :(

subrosa said...

Oh LotF, surely someone can't be threatening the life of our PM? Erm...

McGonagall said...

I'm glad this is available to convalescing servicemen but how come charities had to provide this facility and not the government?

Conan the Librarian™ said...

I fear twelve beds may not be enough...

subrosa said...

That's why Gordon Brown stayed in his Dunfermline prison scunnert. No spin would be good enough for him to have had a photo opportunity there, even though I'm quite sure he thought there must be a way.

subrosa said...

Very true Conan and I think exactly the same but 12 is far better than nothing.

I should think at the planning stage of this building it was never thought that Scots soldiers would be coming home so injured from any other war than Afghanistan.

Related Posts with Thumbnails