 Minister for Health, Senator the Honourable Mary Isaac, along with a delegation, recently taught the Victoria Hospital, which is being transformed into a full-scale respiratory hospital. Senator the Honourable Mary Isaac says, she is very pleased with the work being done on the respiratory hospital, and hope it will assist in handling a possible surge of COVID-19 in St. Lucia. I'm hoping that we will be able to use this facility to contain the virus, to manage the virus, and to treat the virus, which is what we have been doing. But we have not been as focused as we would like to be in terms of having the proper facility. So this facility is going to give us an opportunity to have a better place to bring these potential cases, and for us to take care of these cases in a very nice facility. It is looking, it's already looking very, very nice. The rooms I saw, the size of the rooms, the rooms have their own toilet in both cases, or sometimes a person may be sharing a toilet with somebody else. But it's looking excellent from now, from what I have seen. Chief Health Planner Dwight Kallix spoke on the need for government to undertake this project of significant importance. As part of the COVID response, we had to get an intervention where we could appropriately manage our patients. So there is quarantine, there is isolation, and so on. So the respiratory facility was at this point, it would have managed in terms of our quarantine patients, those quarantine patients, which would have required medical attention. So our quarantine facility in the north would take care of those persons who are the suspect cases within four, their results. This facility would be the same suspect cases within four results but required medical attention. Executive Director of OKEUH and Victoria Hospital, Nancy Francis, highlighted the management of the works undertaken as to ensure the smooth running of the project. We have ongoing construction works over at the respiratory hospital. At the same time, we have patients coming to receive care. So we have to ensure that the logistics is carefully coordinated between our project team, the contractor, and the World Bank team. So we have on ground our hospital engineer who's working very closely with the Scaly Construction as well as the oversight committee from the World Bank. So on a daily basis, our project engineer will be in contact with Scaly Construction so they can look at the logistics for the day. And from a management perspective, every single day we have a manager on ground at the respiratory hospital to ensure that things are coordinated in the right way and we are able to respond to any emergencies that may arise. The Victoria Hospital is designed to treat patients with respiratory illnesses such as COVID-19 and will have the capacity of 85 rooms. Reporting from the Communications Unit of the Ministry of Health and Wellness, I am Funa Neptune.