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  2. Hospital radio - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hospital_radio

    Hospital radio has been found to be beneficial to patients, lifting their mood and aiding recovery. There are hundreds of hospital radio stations in the UK, almost all are members of the Hospital Broadcasting Association (HBA), which was set up by stations for their mutual benefit and does not govern or run them. Hospital radio stations are ...

  3. Kingstown Radio - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kingstown_Radio

    Basic hospital radio studio. Kingstown Radio is a hospital radio station founded in 1961 and based in Kingston upon Hull, England, broadcasting on 1350 kHz (AM), to patient's bedside Hospedia systems and via the local NHS intranet across the Hull and East Yorkshire NHS Trust. It is a registered charity.

  4. Hospedia - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hospedia

    The hospital stations are to be found on channel 1 on the system which also includes the facility to contact the station via the telephone on the unit. Listening through traditional means required hospitals to maintain a radio system beside each bed, but in many locations Hospedia is now the only way to access hospital radio.

  5. Radio Grapevine - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Radio_Grapevine

    Radio Grapevine is a member-station of the Hospital Broadcasting Association and takes part in "Hospital Broadcasting Week" each year. This involves raising the profile of Hospital Radio locally and nationally. [4] Patients within the hospital can listen to Radio Grapevine through their bedside radio sets and switching to Channel 1 on the dial.

  6. Hospital Broadcasting Association - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hospital_Broadcasting...

    The Hospital Broadcasting Association (HBA) supports the 160 independent hospital broadcasting organisations serving hospitals, hospices and nursing homes in the UK. The vast majority of these organisations provide hospital radio services through a variety of broadcast medium as well as a few hospital television services.

  7. Harold Wood Hospital - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Harold_Wood_Hospital

    Hospital Radio service began at Harold Wood on 14 February 1964, initially starting as "Warley Hospital Radio Service". [6]The secretary of Harold Wood Hospital gave the radio group a room in the recreation hall, where the service became known as Harold Wood Radio and began providing a radio service to the wards of the Hospital by connecting into the patients' bedside radio amplifiers. [6]

  8. University Hospital Coventry - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/University_Hospital_Coventry

    The hospital plays host to Coventry Hospital Radio, a free station provided through the Hospedia bedside units and now online via their website. The station is situated on the 5th floor and is available to all wards and online via the website providing music, entertainment and chat 24 hours a day, 7 days a week.

  9. Seaside Hospital Radio - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Seaside_Hospital_Radio

    Seaside Hospital Radio (known until 2004 as Radio Southlands) [1] is a Hospital Radio service broadcasting to both Worthing and Southlands Hospitals in West Sussex, England from a studio site in Shoreham by Sea. The hospitals are considered to be one working hospital, however healthcare services operate between the two.