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East Lancashire Hospitals NHS Trust is an NHS hospital trust in Lancashire, England.It was established on 1 September 2002, [2] as the result of a locally controversial, cost saving merger of Blackburn Hyndburn & Ribble Valley NHS Trust and Burnley Health Care NHS Trust, first announced in September 1999.
In 1929 it became known as the Queen's Park Institution, a name which evolved to become the Queen's Park Hospital. [1] A new hospital, to be known as the Royal Blackburn Teaching Hospital, was procured under a Private Finance Initiative contract in 2003 to replace the Queen's Park Hospital and the Blackburn Royal Infirmary. [2]
Royal Free Hospital – Hampstead; Royal London Hospital for Integrated Medicine; St Ann's Hospital – Harringay; St Pancras Hospital – St Pancras, London; University College Hospital – Bloomsbury; Wellington Hospital – St John's Wood (independent) Whittington Hospital – Highgate
There were about 200 “trolley waits” where patients waited more than 12 hours to be admitted to a ward. [8] The trust consider themselves to be the leading provider of prostatectomies within the region, but the East Lancashire Hospitals NHS Trust challenged this in June 2015 by installing a da Vinci Surgical System at the Royal Blackburn ...
Although the foundation stone was laid on 24 May 1858, because of the depressed state of the local cotton industry, the Blackburn Infirmary did not open until 1864. [1] The Victoria Wing was added to commemorate the diamond jubilee of Queen Victoria in 1897. [2] The facility became known as the Blackburn and East Lancashire Royal Infirmary from ...
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The original hospital on the site was established as an infirmary for the local workhouse in March 1876. [1] A new infirmary was built on the site, slightly north of the old one, in 1895. [ 1 ] It became known as Primrose Bank Hospital in the 1930s and as Burnley General Hospital on the formation of the National Health Service in 1948.