WINCHESTER University is providing campus accommodation to frontline NHS staff who are unable to stay in their own homes.

Around 25 workers from Hampshire Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust (HHFT) and Southern Health NHS Foundation Trust have already moved into vacated student flats.

These are at King Alfred Quarter, which is situated close to Royal Hampshire County Hospital. More staff are due to move in over the next week.

The uni has prepared 90 bedrooms in total and is preparing to provide more to the trusts if they are needed.

Professor Joy Carter, CBE, DL, vice-chancellor, said: "I am hugely proud the university is able make our facilities and resources available to support the critical work of our local NHS to protect and save lives.

"On behalf of everyone at the university, I would like to say a huge thank you to all NHS staff and key workers who are doing amazing work during this pandemic.

"They truly are heroes and we owe them an enormous debt of gratitude. We are in close contact with the Hospital and other local organisations to continue doing what we can to support the local response to Covid-19."

Staff from the university's department of estates and facilities, along with volunteers from across the university, worked to accommodate HHFT staff as soon as possible.

All residents received a welcome pack, a jute bag filled with personal toiletries, healthy snacks, tea and coffee, and a reusable cup.

Alex Whitfield, chief executive of Hampshire Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust, which runs Royal Hampshire County Hospital in Winchester, said: "We are incredibly grateful to our staff who have made the difficult decision to temporarily stay away from home to protect their families while continuing their vital role of helping to care for our patients.

"Our partners at the university have made this tough time a little bit easier for them and we want to say a huge thank you for the way they have provided members of our team with such a warm welcome. We are delighted that the partnership between our two organisations continues to go from strength to strength, particularly at a time where working together is more important than ever before."

The university has also made 50 parking spaces on its King Alfred Quarter available to NHS workers free of charge.

More than 3,000 sheets of acetate donated to HHFT by the uni are being used to make single-use face guards.