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Hong Kong Children's Hospital (Chinese: 香港兒童醫院; Cantonese Yale: Hēunggóng Yìhtùhng Yīyún) is the first children hospital in Hong Kong's public healthcare system, [1] located in Kowloon City, [2] Hong Kong.
Hong Kong has about 1.9 doctors per 1000 people, which is the same ratio as in Taiwan. [10] Of the over 14,600 doctors in Hong Kong, about 60% work in private practice and the remaining 40% work in the public service. [11] The majority of doctors in Hong Kong, graduated from one of the 2 local medical schools.
Li Shu Fan – Hong Kong doctor and politician [28] Faculty of Medicine, University of Hong Kong. Yuen Kwok-yung – Hong Kong microbiologist [29] Paul Tam – Hong Kong doctor [30] Ko Wing-man – Hong Kong doctor and former Secretary for Food and Health [31] Chuang Shuk-kwan – Hong Kong public health doctor and government official [32]
Orthopaedic teams from the University of Hong Kong’s Department of Surgery (the forerunners of today’s Department of Orthopaedics and Traumatology at the University of Hong Kong’s Medical Centre) working at the hospital pioneered the operation, most notably the "Hodgson/Yau" surgical team of Dr (later Professor) A. R. Hodgson and Dr ...
British Military Hospital, Hong Kong, 1907–1996; Lai Chi Kok Hospital, 1938–2004; Hong Kong Central Hospital, 1966–2012; Nam Long Hospital, 1967–2003; Victoria Hospital, Hong Kong, 1903–1945
Modern medical education in Hong Kong started in 1887 with the founding of the Hong Kong College of Medicine for Chinese. Currently, two universities provide MBBS degree for doctors and six universities provide undergraduate degrees in other subjects of health sciences.
All nursing programmes in Hong Kong have to be approved by the Nursing Council of Hong Kong. Registered nurses must undergo at least 3 years of training, either via theoretical and practical training at a nursing school based in hospitals, or via a pre-registration nursing programme at a university or college; whereas, enrolled nurses must take a programme of at least 2 years in duration. [5]
In May, LKSF donated HK$150 million to support the Faculty of Medicine, The Chinese University of Hong Kong's research funding, [24] HK$5 million to support the Hong Kong Academy of Nursing in promoting the continuing education of specialist nurses, [25] and to support the Education University of Hong Kong in popularising AI education. [26]