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After local officials decided to build a new hospital, it moved to a new site, leased from Andrew Montagu, in 1905. Local people paid a halfpenny a week to finance the venture which initially only had 14 beds. [3] The size of the hospital grew steadily although between 1919 and 1939, the number of hospital beds increased from 48 to 120. [4]
Doncaster and Bassetlaw Teaching Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust was established in 2004. It runs services at Bassetlaw District General Hospital , Doncaster Royal Infirmary , Montagu Hospital and Retford Hospital , in Nottinghamshire and South Yorkshire , England.
The hospital joined the National Health Service in 1948. [3] With the formation of the Doncaster Area Health Authority in 1974, Doncaster Royal Infirmary acted as a hub for a series of facilities encompassing Loversall Hospital, Tickhill Road Hospital, St Catherine's Hospital and Western Hospital. [5]
The Trust was established as Doncaster Healthcare NHS Trust on 1 November 1991, [1] and renamed the Doncaster and South Humber Healthcare NHS Trust on 1 October 1999 [2] following the dissolution of Scunthorpe Community Health Care NHS Trust [3] and merger of its services into the Trust. In April 2002 the Trust took on responsibility for the ...
The hospital was built by Adshead, Topham and Adshead as an isolation hospital between 1928 and 1929. [1] The hospital wards are named after trees with names such as Ash, Elm and Pine Wards and, more recently, Hazel Ward. [2] It specialises in rehabilitation for older people before they return home.
The hospital was completely rebuilt between 1982 and 1987 with the new facilities being officially opened by the Princess of Wales in September 1987. [4] Following the demolition of the pre-fabricated hut-style wards in the early 1990s, a new coronary care unit and a new rehabilitation ward were completed in 1994 and a new CT scanner and breast ...
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The hospital, which replaced both the Sheffield Royal Hospital and the Sheffield Royal Infirmary, was designed by Adams, Holden and Pearson and built in two phases; the first phase, a three-storey out-patients department was completed in 1971. [1] The second phase, the main building, was opened by the Prince of Wales in 1978.