'Shocking': More delay for ten years overdue £97m maternity hospital

Exterior of new maternity hospital in BelfastImage source, Belfast Trust
Image caption,

The new maternity hospital is on the site of Belfast's Royal Victoria Hospital

The announcement that the opening of Belfast's new maternity hospital could be delayed has been described as "shocking" by members of Stormont's health committee.

On Monday, the Health Minister Mike Nesbitt announced the opening of the hospital could be delayed by another 28 months, due to ongoing building work problems including dangerous bacteria found in the water system.

The Belfast Trust said while the delays were frustrating it was vital that water safety issues were addressed before vulnerable patients were cared for.

The Royal College of Midwives (RCM) in Northern Ireland said the delay is "extremely disappointing" and "frustrating".

Sinn Féin MLA and health committee chair Philip McGuigan said that it is "absolutely shocking" that the maternity hospital isn't open.

"The health minister needs to have some sort of accountability. He needs to ensure there are no other setbacks," he added.

Deputy chair, Alliance MLA Danny Donnelly, said that action is urgently needed.

"The minister needs to get a grip on these runaway capital projects," he said.

Diane Dodds wearing a cream coat with a light brown and black scarf. She has brown hair.
Image caption,

DUP's Diane Dodds said people "deserve better" following news Belfast's new maternity hospital will be delayed further

Earlier, Democratic Unionist Party (DUP) assembly member Diane Dodds said it was "nothing short of a scandal" and that it was "10 years too late and double the cost".

Dodds told BBC Radio Ulster's Good Morning Ulster programme it had been 15 months since the building had been handed over to the Belfast Trust.

"Most worryingly of all, the health minister said that none of the options might actually solve the problem", she added.

Delays 'frustrating' for women

Anne Wilson, the RCM's interim director, said that it is "crucial the water safety issues are addressed before women, their babies, and families can be cared for safely in the new hospital".

She said the ongoing delays are "frustrating for women and their families".

"Our members will continue to deliver safe compassionate midwifery care to women within the existing maternity unit, in community settings and in women's homes across Belfast," she added.

The Health Minister Mike Nesbitt told the assembly he could not "soften the news" and has asked for an external expert to review if the decision taken is the best one, and if parts of the hospital, at the Royal Victoria Hospital site, could be opened in the meantime.

Nike Nesbitt wearing a grey suit, blue shirt and grey tie. Also wearing black framed glasses and has short grey hair. Image source, PA Media
Image caption,

Health Minister Mike Nesbitt said the opening of the new maternity hospital could be delayed by another 28 months

Why has Belfast's maternity hospital been delayed?

The new maternity hospital, which is based in the grounds of the Royal Victoria Hospital in Belfast, is already 10 years behind schedule and has cost £97m so far.

The trust took possession of the five-storey building from the contractors, Graham Bam Healthcare Partnership, in March 2024.

It then began a "clinical commissioning phase" - a process of ensuring a safe transition of service to the new site.

Just a few months later in July, the trust said that during testing of water outlets, high levels of Pseudomonas aeruginosa were discovered in the water system.

Pseudomonas infection killed three babies at Belfast's Royal Jubilee Hospital in 2012.

The infection does not usually affect healthy people but infants and people with weakened immune systems are vulnerable.

During last Thursday's health committee, it emerged that the health trust faced three options to try to fix the water system.

These included:

  • Ongoing testing of individual water taps across the building

  • Installing a "discreet checking system" for high-risk areas including the neonatal unit

  • Pulling out the entire water system, which was described by management as "excessive"

Management has chosen the second option, which they said was the "safest" way to proceed as vulnerable babies would be protected.

A spokesperson for the Belfast Trust said the significant delays were "deeply" frustrating for everyone involved in the project, but it was vital the water safety issues were addressed before vulnerable patients were cared for.

They added that their proposed solution to the problem was arrived at after a review of all "available information regarding the water systems within the new Maternity Hospital".

"The work included in the preferred option will take, in total, 24 months and then four months to move staff, patients, and services into the new hospital."