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The Health Board controls an annual budget of £570 million, and employs around 8000 staff. Forth Valley Royal Hospital in Larbert is supported by a network of four community facilities, 57 health centres, day centres providing care and support for patients with mental illness and learning disabilities and a wide range of community based services.
After many of the services transferred to the Forth Valley Royal Hospital in 2010, [2] the Stirling Royal Infirmary was downgraded to the status of a community hospital. [1] The site has since been redeveloped as the Stirling Health and Care Village. [3] [4]
The site was taken over by The Forth Valley Health Board in April 1974, and patient numbers remained around 1,300 into the 1980s. [3] The general opinion had changed from taking care of those with mental health issues, instead of sending them away patients should be cared for in the community and by their own family. [ 3 ]
Falkirk is administered by NHS Forth Valley, this includes the unitary authorities of Falkirk, Stirling and Clackmannanshire. Following the opening of the new Forth Valley Royal Hospital , the Falkirk and District Royal Infirmary was renamed Falkirk Community Hospital [ 43 ] with many of the main services, including the accident and emergency ...
After many of the services were transferred to the Forth Valley Royal Hospital, the Falkirk Royal Infirmary was downgraded to the status of community hospital in 2010. [2] The minor injury unit, which treated emergency cases of a non life-threatening nature, closed in July 2011.
The Forth Valley Royal Hospital was designed by Equion, a subsidiary of Laing O'Rourke, and Keppie Designs [1] in cooperation with builders Laing O'Rourke. [2] After a consultation process in 2003, involving 5,600 local residents, [3] it was decided that a new acute hospital should be built to replace the ageing facilities at Stirling Royal Infirmary and Falkirk Royal Infirmary, which were to ...
The Golden Jubilee University National Hospital [31] is a special NHS Board in Scotland with the purpose of reducing waiting times using a single modern hospital located at Clydebank. It was previously a private sector hospital built at a cost of £180 million, but was bought in 2002 by the Scottish Executive for £37.5 million after it failed ...
Each board was responsible for a number of hospital management committees (HMCs), and each region was associated with a university running a school of medicine. The National Health Service Reorganisation Act 1973 replaced the hospital boards with regional health authorities and area health authorities in 1974.