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Through Sullivan Nicolaides the company acquired the practice of Tom Lynch in Rockhampton (Queensland). Through SKG Radiology, the company acquired Fremantle Radiology (Western Australia). Sonic Healthcare acquired Richard Haskell's NSW Central Coast Pathology practice in 2003, along with the Southside Diagnostic Services Group in Brisbane.
Dr David Weedon AO (born 1941) is an Australian physician and dermatopathologist. [1] He was born in Queensland. He received his MBBS degree in 1966 at the University of Queensland (and later the M.D.), and completed residency training in pathology at that institution and the Mayo Clinic in Rochester, MN in the U.S. [2] Weedon has authored two notable books in the field of pathology.
St. Michael's Hospital; Bristol Eye Hospital (has A&E daytime every day, eye only) [12] University of Bristol Dental Hospital [13] Central Health Clinic (clinics relating to sexual health and breast screening) North Bristol NHS Trust manages hospitals in the north of Bristol and in South Gloucestershire. Southmead Hospital (has A&E) Cossham ...
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61 Queen Charlotte Street is an historic house situated on Queen Charlotte Street in Bristol, England. It dates from the early eighteenth century and is similar in design to houses of c. 1710 in nearby Queen Square. [1] 6 King Street is a nearby house with a similar frontage. It has been designated by English Heritage as a Grade II* listed ...
It joined the National Health Service as the Bristol Lying-In Hospital in 1948, but then moved to Queen Victoria House on Durdham Down where Clementine Churchill conducted an official opening in November 1950. [2] [3] It returned to St Michael's Hill as the Bristol Maternity Hospital in 1975, [2] and became known as St. Michael's Hospital in ...
Queen Square is a 2.4 hectares (5.9 acres) Georgian square in the centre of Bristol, England. [1] Following the 1831 riot, Queen Square declined through the latter part of the 19th century, was threatened with a main line railway station, but then bisected by a dual carriageway in the 1930s.
The Bristol Royal Infirmary was founded by public subscription in 1735, making it one of the oldest infirmaries in the United Kingdom. [3] The infirmary was opened on Maudlin Lane (now Lower Maudlin Street) in December 1737, taking 17 male and 17 female patients. [4]