National Taiwan University Hospital

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The National Taiwan University Hospital consists of several high rise buildings in the center of this picture and several low level buildings at the bottom right of the picture.
The National Taiwan University Hospital consists of several high rise buildings in the center of this picture and several low level buildings at the bottom right of the picture.
The older wing of the National Taiwan University Hospital dates to 1912.
The older wing of the National Taiwan University Hospital dates to 1912.

National Taiwan University Hospital (NTUH, 國立台灣大學醫學院附設醫院) started operations under Japanese rule in Dadaocheng on June 18, 1895, and moved to its present location in 1898. The Hospital was later annexed to the Medical School of Taipei Imperial University and renamed Taipei Imperial University Medical School Affiliated Hospital in 1937. The present name was adopted in 1949, when the Republic of China took over the hospital upon Taiwan's retrocession in 1945.

On October 19, 1991, the completion of a large new building complex on the so-called East Site marked another milestone in the history of the NTUH. Today, the (new) East and (old) West Sites together have more than 4,000 employees, serving 2,000 inpatients and 8,000 outpatients daily. The hospital remains the best-known and most highly-renowned medical center in Taiwan.

The hospital is a world-renowned medical center for liver diseases. Advanced surgical, angiographical, and endoscopic procedures are routinely performed.

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