Musgrave Park Hospital

Not to be confused with Musgrove Park Hospital.
Musgrave Park Hospital
Belfast Trust
Geography
Location Ballygammon, Belfast, County Antrim, Northern Ireland, United Kingdom
Coordinates 54°34′03″N 5°58′37″W / 54.56750°N 5.97694°W / 54.56750; -5.97694Coordinates: 54°34′03″N 5°58′37″W / 54.56750°N 5.97694°W / 54.56750; -5.97694
Organisation
Care system Health and Social Care in Northern Ireland
Hospital type Specialist
Affiliated university Queen's University Belfast
Services
Speciality Orthopaedics, Rheumatology, Acquired Brain Injury Unit, Sports Medicine
Links
Website Belfast Trust
Lists Hospitals in Northern Ireland

Musgrave Park Hospital is a regional specialist hospital, managed by Belfast Health and Social Care Trust in Belfast, Northern Ireland. It specialises in orthopaedics, rheumatology, sports medicine and rehabilitation of patients of all ages. These specialties are spread out across a large site in the leafy suburbs of South Belfast. The Hospital is named after the 48 acres (19 ha) of adjacent municipal parkland known as Musgrave Park, first opened to the public in 1920.

History

Nissen Huts were constructed on the site of the current hospital during the Second World War by the American army. They were a temporary base for soldiers preparing to take part in the Normandy landings. They have housed various hospital departments in their 44-year history and have only recently been demolished to make way for the new Regional Acquired Brain Injury Unit.[1]

The hospital has played its part in the history of the troubles. On Monday 15 December 1980, Sean McKenna, one of the original seven hunger strikers was moved to Musgrave Park Hospital.[2]

In November 1991, a bomb planted by the Provisional IRA exploded in the Military Wing at Musgrave Park hospital. Two soldiers were killed (one Royal Army Medical Corps, the other Royal Corps of Transport), and 11 other people were injured, among them a five-year-old girl and a baby of four months. The 20 lb (9.1 kg) of Semtex exploded in a service tunnel connecting the Withers block, containing orthopaedic and children's wards and the Military Wing.[3] The dead and injured were watching a rugby match on television in the Military Wing's social club.

The trust works in collaboration with 7 other specialist orthopaedic providers within the NHS in England as part of the Specialist Orthopaedic Alliance

Hospital Services

Rehabilitation

References

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Friday, January 02, 2015. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.