Hammersmith Hospital
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Hammersmith Hospital Imperial College Healthcare NHS Trust |
|
Location | |
---|---|
Place | Acton London, England, (UK) |
Organisation | |
Care System | Public NHS |
Hospital Type | Teaching |
Affiliated University | Imperial College London |
Services | |
Emergency Dept. | No Accident & Emergency |
Beds | Unknown |
History | |
Founded | 1912 |
Links | |
Website | Imperial College NHS Trust, Hammersmith Homepage |
See also | Hospitals in England |
Hammersmith Hospital is a major teaching hospital in West London. It is associated with the Imperial College medical faculty and is part of the Imperial College Healthcare NHS Trust in the London Borough of Hammersmith and Fulham. Confusingly the hospital is north of White City adjacent to Wormwood Scrubs and East Acton, rather than in Hammersmith.
Its origins begin in 1902, when the Hammersmith Poor Law Guardians decided to erect a new workhouse and infirmary on a 14-acre site at the north side of Du Cane Road in Hammersmith. The land, adjacent to Wormwood Scrubs Prison, was purchased for £14,500 from the Ecclesiastical Commissioners. A temporary corrugated iron building was erected on the site in 1902 to provide care for victims of a smallpox epidemic that had taken place in the winter of 1901-2. The buildings were designed by the firm of Giles, Gough and Trollope. The infirmary occupied the front part of the site with a central administrative building flanked by pavilion ward blocks linked by a single storey corridor running east-west. A laundry, boiler-house and workshops lay at the centre of the site.
In 1916, the patients and inmates were moved to other establishments and the site was taken over by the War Office for use as the Military Orthopaedic Hospital. It was then renamed the Special Surgical Hospital, and in 1919 became the Ministry of Pensions Hospital. In 1926, demands by the Hammersmith Guardians for return of their property finally succeeded and the site became Hammersmith Hospital. By 1930, the infirmary could accommodate 300 patients.
Until 1997 it was the home of the Royal Postgraduate Medical School which then became part of Imperial College, the hospital continues to be a major centre of post-graduate medical study as part of the UK's first Academic Health Science Centre. The Medical Research Council (MRC) also has a major presence at Hammersmith Hospital providing a strong foundation for clinical and scientific research, with extensive research and development of imaging techniques..
Hammersmith Hospital is internationally renowned for clinical research. Its clinical reputation was built on the treatment of medical conditions notably of the heart and kidney, and now includes an angioplasty suite, a cancer centre, a leukaemia wing and the West London Renal and Transplant Centre. Specialist surgery is available for liver cancer, kidney transplantation, gynaecological cancer and cardiothoracic procedures
The address is:
Hammersmith Hospital, Du Cane Road, London, W12 0HS. The telephone number is 020 8383 1000.