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The hospital became the London Free Hospital in 1833, and the Free Hospital in 1835. [1] A royal charter was granted by Queen Victoria in 1837 to what then became the Royal Free Hospital, after it was the only hospital to stay open during the 1826–1837 cholera epidemic [2] and had cared for many victims. [1] [3]
Royal Free Hospital has a total of roughly 900 beds and treats around 700,000 patients each year. [3] In partnership with University College London (UCL), the trust has major research activities and it forms part of the UCLPartners academic health science centre. [7] The Royal Free Hospital is also a teaching centre for the UCL Medical School. [12]
The Royal is a British period medical drama, produced by Yorkshire Television (later part of ITV Studios), and broadcast on ITV from 2003 until its cancellation in 2011. The series is set in the 1960s and focuses on the lives of the staff at the fictional "St Aidan's Royal Free Hospital", a National Health Service hospital serving the fictional rural seaside town of Elsinby and its surrounding ...
The school's clinical teaching is primarily conducted at University College Hospital, the Royal Free Hospital, and the Whittington Hospital, with other associated teaching hospitals including the Great Ormond Street Hospital, Moorfields Eye Hospital, the National Hospital for Neurology and Neurosurgery and the Royal National Throat, Nose and ...
Royal Free Hospital, a teaching hospital in Hampstead, founded in 1828, given royal patronage by Queen Victoria in 1837, and moving to Pond Street in the 1970s Royal Hospital Chelsea , a retirement home and nursing home for British soldiers, the 'Chelsea Pensioners', founded by King Charles II in 1681
Physicians of the Royal Free Hospital (25 P) Pages in category "Royal Free Hospital" The following 3 pages are in this category, out of 3 total.
UCLPartners is an academic health science centre located in London, England. It is the largest academic health science centre in the world, treats more than 1.5 million patients each year, has a combined annual turnover of around £2 billion and includes around 3,500 scientists, senior researchers and consultants.
William Marsden by Thomas Henry Illidge. Marsden's house on Lincoln's Inn Fields, close to the Royal College of Surgeons. William Marsden (August 1796 – 16 January 1867) was an English surgeon whose main achievements are the founding of two presently well-known hospitals, the Royal Free Hospital (in 1828) and the Royal Marsden Hospital (in 1851).