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The hospital network is the second largest in Sweden, [3] after Sahlgrenska University Hospital. The present day Karolinska University Hospital is the result of a 2004 merger between the former Huddinge University Hospital (Huddinge universitetssjukhus) in Huddinge, south of Stockholm, and the Karolinska Hospital (Karolinska sjukhuset) in Solna ...
The Karolinska University Hospital, located in Solna and Huddinge, is associated with the university as a research and teaching hospital. Together they form an academic health science centre. While most of the medical programs are taught in Swedish, the bulk of the PhD projects are conducted in English.
Since 1938, it has been a division of what is now the Karolinska University Hospital. It was founded in 1910 in central Stockholm as the first oncological clinic in Sweden, succeeding a radium research and treatment institution at the Serafimerlasarett founded in 1906, and played a major role in the development of radiotherapy, especially in ...
Karolinska University Hospital; L. Linköping University Hospital; O. ... Uppsala University Hospital This page was last edited on 3 May 2012, at 10:29 (UTC). Text is ...
Karolinska Institutet, Stockholm, Sweden Per Svenningsson is a neurologist specializing in the neuropharmacology of movement disorders such as Parkinson's disease . He is a professor of neurology at the Department of Clinical Neuroscience at the Karolinska Institutet and in the Department of Neurology at Karolinska University Hospital in ...
Ersta Hospital - Stockholm; Huddinge universitetssjukhus - Huddinge (now a part of Karolinska universitetssjukhuset and called Karolinska Universitetsjukhuset i Huddinge) Jakobsbergs sjukhus - Järfälla; New Karolinska Solna University Hospital - Solna and Huddinge; Löwenströmska sjukhuset - Upplands Väsby; Norrtälje sjukhus - Norrtälje
Claude Nils Gustaf Marcus (born August 19, 1952 in Stockholm, Sweden) is a pediatrician at Karolinska University Hospital and Professor at the Karolinska Institute, most notably renowned for his research relating to childhood obesity. [1]
Rune Elmqvist (1 December 1906 – 15 December 1996) was a Swedish physician turned engineer who developed the first implantable pacemaker in 1958, working under the direction of Åke Senning, senior physician and cardiac surgeon at the Karolinska University Hospital in Solna, Sweden. Elmqvist was born in Lund, and received his MD in 1939.