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Waikato Hospital celebrates 125th anniversary with book launchSome 125 years ago, Waikato Hospital was a small kauri farm cottage overlooking Lake Rotoroa in Hamilton.Today it stands as a sprawling campus undergoing a $430 million building programme – the biggest redevelopment in its history – and has a staff of more than 6000 people. To mark the 125th anniversary of the hospital a limited-edition book, The Village on the Hill: Celebrating 125 Years of Waikato Hospital, will be launched on Thursday (December 1). The day marks exactly 125 years since the first meeting of the Waikato Hospital and Charitable Aid Board in Hamilton on December 1, 1886. The 160-page, hard-cover book contains 48 pages of historic photographs, profiles of current staff and press releases documenting newsworthy hospital happenings in 2011.
Just 8000 copies of the book and DVD have been produced, with the majority going to Waikato DHB staff as a gift. Waikato Health Trust, a charity which supports health and disability services in the Waikato District Health Board area, has donated $150,000 to fund the book and DVD. Trust chair Pippa Mahood says Waikato Hospital has a rich history, and, with the current building revamp and on its 125th anniversary, the timing was right for a book to celebrate its people. “There are a huge number of people who have worked at the hospital for many years, and this is a chance to say ‘thank you’ to staff,” says Mahood. “Waikato Hospital is the city’s largest employer. Its contribution to the economy, the wellbeing and the social harmony of Hamilton can not be underestimated. The book contains profiles of 31 staff currently working at the hospital, each talking about their job and a ‘typical day’ for them. Included are a mortuary technician, a student nurse, a barista, a social worker, a perinatal psychologist, a paediatric surgeon, a midwife and a laboratory technician. Among the staff are those who have worked at the hospital for three or four decades, including Child Development Centre administrator Julie-Anne Smyth, and electrical maintenance supervisor Alan Duggan. There are those who have a multi-generational family connection, including Director of Paediatric Anaesthetics Doctor Hugh Douglas. His father, grandfather and great-grandfather have all worked at the hospital, and all have been named Dr Hugh Douglas. The book is collaboration between three Waikato institutions: the Waikato DHB, Wintec and Hamilton-based printing company Print House. Wintec journalism tutor Charles Riddell says the project was “a wonderful opportunity for students and tutors to apply skills learnt in the classroom to a real-life production, run to professional deadlines and client specifications”. Among the contributors were journalism, photography, moving image and graphic design students. Design lecturer Simon Nicholls oversaw the book’s design and layout, while senior lecturer in Graphic & Digital Design Mark Liu put together a website, www.villageonthehill.co.nz. The production of the book was an exciting challenge for staff at Frankton-based company Print House, says manager Stephen O’Toole. To give the historic photographs a more authentic feel, that section was printed on environmentally friendly Eco-100 paper stock (Forest Stewardship Council accredited). The book is case-bound and section-sewn, with a hard cover, with a silver foil title on the front, and with a full colour dust jacket featuring a modern image of Waikato Hospital. “It’s come out looking good,” says Print House manager Stephen O’Toole. “We are really pleased with the result. We enjoyed our collaboration with the Waikato DHB and with Wintec to bring it all together.” Note for editors:
ENDS Date: 28 November 2011 Contact: Mary Anne Gill Communications Director Waikato District Health Board 021 705 213 |