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The new General Hospital building in Sandford Road, designed by D. J. Humphries and built between 1848 and 1849, has since served as the main hospital in Cheltenham. It took over the operation of the Cheltenham Ophthalmic Hospital c.1882, and joined the National Health Service in 1948. [1] The popular entertainer Eric Morecambe died at the ...
The trust was formed in 2002 by a merger of Gloucestershire Royal and East Gloucestershire NHS Trusts, [3] has an annual operating income of £550 million, 960 beds, over 150,000 emergency attendances and 800,000 outpatient appointments each year. [4]
Cheltenham General Hospital – Cheltenham, Gloucestershire; Cheltenham Nuffield Hospital (independent) - Cheltenham, Gloucestershire; Christchurch Hospital – Christchurch, Dorset; Cossham Memorial Hospital – Bristol; Derriford Hospital – Plymouth, Devon; Duchy Hospital (independent) – Truro, Cornwall; Dorset County Hospital ...
Map all coordinates using OpenStreetMap Download coordinates as: KML GPX (all coordinates) GPX (primary coordinates) GPX (secondary coordinates) There are over 20,000 Grade II* listed buildings in England. This page is a list of these buildings in the district of Cheltenham in Gloucestershire. List of buildings Name Location Type Completed Date designated Grid ref. Geo-coordinates Entry number ...
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In 2021, Gloucestershire Integrated Care System decided to centralise emergency general surgery, vascular surgery and acute medicine at Gloucestershire Royal Hospital, and to move orthopaedic and gastroenterology services to Cheltenham General Hospital. Cheltenham, where 34 beds would be closed, would keep a reduced-hours emergency department.
Bourbon Street has long been party central, and little changed in the hours after Surgeon General Vivek Murthy on Friday outlined the direct link between alcohol consumption and increased cancer risk.
Leckhampton Court is a Grade II* listed 14th-century manor house in Leckhampton, Cheltenham, Gloucestershire.. The current court was originally built for a branch of the wealthy Giffards of Brimpsfield Castle, and it would remain in the hands of their descendants for over five centuries; today the court is a part of Sue Ryder and is run as a hospice.