Critics' Choice

Restaurants

David Sexton

quoteFor a chain, Gaucho is startlingly expensive, the final bill ending up pretty close to one from much more stylish, individual restaurantsquote

David Sexton Gaucho Film

Charlotte O'Sullivan

quoteAction heroes are often small; Wanted, at least, acknowledges the missing inches - and does so with a smilequote

Charlotte O'Sullivan Wanted Theatre

Nick Curtis

quoteThis lightweight tennis comedy scores few pointsquote

Nick Curtis Grand Slam

Reader reviews

Film

Jake, London

quoteI challenge anyone not to walk out feeling on cloud nine and humming Mamma Mia!quote

Mamma Mia! Restaurants

Simon, London

quoteService is appalling. Last time I went here they had run out of pizza dough at 8pmquote

Pucci Pizza Theatre

Andy, London

quoteI found it to be funny, insightful and interesting as a new workquote

On The Rocks

Hospital's £15k plan to shelter smokers has campaigners fuming

Last updated at 14:37pm on 14.11.06

 Add your view

 

            Kingston Hospital

No smoke without fire: Kingston Hospital is strapped for cash yet spent thousands on a smoking shelter

Health campaigners condemned today a hospital's plan to build a £15,000 shelter for smokers.

The project comes in advance of a government ban on smoking in public places and as the hospital is making cuts of £7.5million and laying off staff. Kingston Hospital said the weather-proof shelter was being built in response to complaints from residents who objected to staff and patients congregating to smoke in the streets. They began smoking outside after the hospital banned smoking in its buildings at the start of the year.

Read more...

Council to ban smoking breaks for staff

There will be an NHS-wide ban from the New Year.

But health campaigners said providing an outdoor space for smokers was not the answer. Amanda Sandford of anti-smoking campaign Ash said: "This is not a good use of money. Hospitals are over-stretched already, with limited resources.

"A better use of the money would be to put it into 'stop smoking' projects for staff and patients.

"There's very little need for provision for short-term visitors because the general expectation is that if you visit a hospital you don't smoke.

"It's more difficult for longerterm patients and staff but even so it should be a basic requirement that anyone working in the health sector does not smoke.

"It's so detrimental to everyone's health that it sends out the wrong message. This is just totally inappropriate."

But Geoff Martin of London Health Emergency said: "It's a fact that a lot of people smoke in the health service. While plenty would like to stop, to deny them their one vice is not really going to help. You need to look at the root cause of why health service workers are smokers.

"It's a very stressful job and Kingston is making £7.5 million of cuts and getting rid of 100 staff so people are really worried about their futures."

A spokeswoman for Kingston Hospital said: "We became a smoke-free site in January this year, which means that smoking isn't allowed in our building or on our grounds. This applies to patients, visitors and staff and is in line with government policy.

"However, this meant that visitors and members of staff started going off-site to smoke and were using neighbouring roads as a regular place for smoking.

"After receiving some complaints from local residents we held a public meeting last month to discuss the best way to resolve the situation. We decided to apply for planning permission for a shelter to be constructed with appropriate seating and waste bins on the very edge of the site, just inside the perimeter wall.

"This was felt to be a reasonable solution to preventing staff and visitors from smoking in neighbouring roads but still complying with a smoke-free hospital site."


 

Reader views (5)

 Add your view | Show all

Here's a sample of the latest views published. You can click view all to read all views that readers have sent in.

I would like to take this opportunity of congratulating Kingston Hospital NHS Trust for acknowledging the fact that smokers are not criminals and it is not illegal. I further congratulate the hospitals decision to respect the concern of its neighbours.

Well done for finding a good solution.

- Paul, Kingston

It's simple, people. If people can't smoke inside, then they will go outside. If they can't smoke on-site, then they will go off-site. If it's a large site, that may be some distance away. And off-site means on someone else's street or outside someone else's premises.

- Sej, Reading, UK

I am only too aware of how difficult it is to give up smoking having given up a 20 a day habit myself - it was torture. However, if people want to smoke that's their own choice and hospitals that are already under extreme monetary difficulties, should not be paying out thousands on building a 'smokers corner'. I wasn't able to smoke at work for years before giving up and wouldn't have dreamt of lighting up anywhere near a hospital (and I had several extremely stressful visits to relatives who actually passed away during my smoking years). Get some perspective people.

- Geraldine, London


Add your comment

Show all

 

Your email address will not be published

Terms and conditions make text area bigger You have  characters left.


 


 
 

Rosamund Urwin podcasts on today's City markets - download now

London's Weather
Tonight
Light rain
13°c
Morning
Light showers
17°c
5 day forecast
 
 

Daily Mail Mail on Sunday Travel Mail This is Money Metro

Loot | Jobsite | Homes & property | London jobs | FindaProperty.com | Primelocation.com | Educate London | Holiday Villas