Push starts for research centre
30/05/2009
Hutt Hospital plastic surgeon Colin Calcinai looks forward to
the day when he can hang up his scalpel because most of his skills
will be redundant.
An ambitious drive began this week to raise $13.5 million to
build a world-class research institute at Hutt Hospital. Research
will be aimed at finding new ways of treating people with
disfiguring and sometimes life- threatening conditions.
"There have been some amazing technological advances in recent
years with microsurgery but we've almost gone as far as we can,"
said Dr Calcinai, who also chairs the Reconstructive Plastic
Surgery Research Foundation, the driving force behind plans for the
Gillies McIndoe Research Institute.
"Surgery is still a blunderbuss approach - we need to look at
the root causes of disease and birth defects and prevent them
happening at all."
The institute, named for Kiwi plastic surgery pioneers Sir
Harold Delf Gillies and Sir Archibald McIndoe, will foster research
into tissue engineering, new blood vessel formation and the
molecular origin of birth defects and cancers.
Hutt Hospital's director of surgery, Professor Swee Tan, who has
received international acclaim for his research on vascular
birthmarks, said they hoped to open the centre within 18 months.
"It's a dream that's been a long time in the making."
The institute's six laboratories will be based on the floor
above the regional plastic, maxillofacial and burns unit, which
treats more than 12,000 patients each year.
The group needs $3.5m to set up the centre and is banking on the
generosity of corporate and individual donors. The next goal will
be to raise $10m for an endowment fund for continuing running
costs.