Birmingham Chest Clinic marks 90 years of helping patients with TB & asthma

Birmingham Chest Clinic has led the way in treatment for lung diseases including tuberculosis (TB) and asthma

Birmingham Chest Clinic - one of Birmingham’s longest-running health clinics - marked its 90thbirthday on  Saturday (March 18) with a celebratory open day, where clinic staff gathered with patients to celebrate its incredible history.

The four storey stone building is tucked away on Great Charles Queensway - not far from the A38 tunnel that funnels traffic underneath the city centre - somewhere between the brand new  Paradise and Snow Hill developments.

Birmingham Chest Clinic, part of University Hospitals Birmingham, has been on this site for almost 90 years, leading the way in the treatment of over 15,000 patients a year who have lung diseases such as  asthma, or tuberculosis (TB).

More recently, experts at Birmingham Chest Clinic have been researching conditions and treatments for a  variety of respiratory illnesses such as sarcoidosis (a rare condition causing small patches of swollen tissue  called granulomas to develop in the lungs), while also providing treatment for patients suffering from Post Covid Syndrome or ‘Long Covid’.

To celebrate the anniversary, the open day provided guests with the opportunity to hear from clinic staff with  the collective experience of centuries, about the clinic’s history, how it has changed over time and their  hopes for its future.

One of the longest serving members of staff, Professor Sherwood Burge, a senior doctor and respiratory  medicine consultant who developed the Occupational Lung Disease service in 1980, shared some of his  earliest memories of working at the clinic.

He said: “The work of Chest Medicine has changed hugely since the clinic opened; TB has become more or  less under control, although it’s still significant here in Birmingham, but much less than it was. Many other  diseases have become a lot more common, particularly asthma, lung fibrosis and chronic obstructive  pulmonary disease.

“Although no longer in use, the clinic still has the original patients changing rooms with cubicles. When I first  started, if you were a patient you had to take off everything down to the waist upon arrival, whether you were male or female, young or old, and you put a bit of cloth around your neck, that tied up behind your  back.

“You then walked downstairs to the x-ray department to have your x-ray. There was no decency at all  and that was completely accepted. Nowadays it’s much more respectable and a very friendly place to  receive care.”

In 2015, Consultant Gareth Walters took over from Professor Burge as the lead for the supra-regional NHS  Occupational Lung Disease service; a role that involves assessing and managing patients whose lung  disease has been caused by their work, often resulting from inhalation of a gas, vapour, dust or fumes.

Gareth said: “As one of only five Occupational Lung services here in the UK, we are really busy and see  patients from a wide area including the South-West, Wales, and the East and West Midlands.”

Interstitial Lung Disease (ILD) Nurse Specialist, Geraldine Burge, trained at a time when, as she recalls,  nurses ‘warmed’ metal bed pans, and when telephones were attached to the walls; one red for emergencies  and one black for all other communications. X-ray’s and scans were mounted on large cellulose films, ward  sisters had bedrooms on the wards, and ward rounds were events to be feared and well prepared for.

Geraldine who single-handedly ran the ILD nursing service for ten years across Birmingham Heartlands  Hospital and Birmingham Chest Clinic, reflected on her career and said: “After 43 years of nursing, I believe  passionately about improving the lives of those with ILD, and the essence of nursing is not in the doing,  rather, in the listening to concerns and then acting through care and compassion, affording dignity, respect,  and value to all.”

Ten years ago, Geraldine set up a West Midlands Interstitial Lung Disease patient support group, providing  a friendly and relaxed environment, where patients and their carers could meet regularly and learn from  others in a similar situation. One of Geraldine’s patients, Artur, and his wife Stasia, have been members of  the group since it was established.

The couple, from Streetly, attended the celebrations at the Chest Clinic at the weekend. Stasia said: “Artur  has been coming to the Chest Clinic for over 10 years. Having Idiopathic Pulmonary Fibrosis (IPF), he went  on a trial for the medication Nintedanib, and is now taking this medication supervised by Professor Burge  and Sister Geraldine Burge.

“Artur would not be here today without the excellent care of Professor Burge, Geraldine Burge and all the  staff; they have gone far beyond what is expected and we are taking this opportunity to thank them for the  wonderful treatment and care they have provided over the years.”

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