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The South Infirmary was established by a catholic charity and officially opened in 1762. [2] Meanwhile the Victoria Hospital for Women and Children, which had been established by a protestant charity and opened at Union Quay in September 1874, moved to Pope's Quay in October 1876 and then re-located to a site adjacent to the South Infirmary in September 1885. [3]
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Cork; Donegal; Dublin. ... South Infirmary-Victoria University Hospital; St. Kevin's Hospital This page was ...
After orthopaedic services at St Mary's were transferred to the South Infirmary-Victoria University Hospital in 2011, an urgent care centre was established at St Mary's in 2012. [3] Around the same time the facility became known as St. Mary's Health Campus.
The Cork Street Fever Hospital (also known as the House of Recovery) was a hospital that opened in Cork Street on 14 May 1804. The hospital was extended in 1817-1819 to help cope with a national typhus epidemic. In 1953 the Cherry Orchard Hospital in Ballyfermot replaced the old Cork Street hospital, which was renamed Brú Chaoimhín and became ...
An annex, which subsequently became known as St. Kevin's Hospital, was built to the east of the main structure in the late 1890s. [4] The main facility became the Cork District Mental Hospital in 1926 and Our Lady's Psychiatric Hospital in 1952. [2]
It was the first Community Treatment Centre of its kind in Scotland and provides services to children and adults living in the North East of Edinburgh and Leith. Consultants from Edinburgh hospitals such as the Western General, the Royal Infirmary and the Royal Hospital for Sick Children attend the centre regularly. Patients are referred here ...
Moore's father was a member of a well-known family in County Limerick, and was a graduate of Trinity College, Dublin.He began the study of medicine in the South Infirmary at Cork in 1835, and in 1840 he commenced working at the Charing Cross Hospital, London, where two years later he was appointed Demonstrator of Anatomy.