Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
The new hospital created several controversies: The decision to close the city-centre Coventry and Warwickshire Hospital, which was easily accessible by public transport, and move all of the city's medical services to a site on the eastern edge of the city, was controversial with people who lived on the other side of Coventry.
The University Hospitals Coventry and Warwickshire NHS Trust works in partnership with the University of Warwick's Warwick Medical School on particular research themes and areas of clinical research as well as providing training and education for postgraduates. [5] [6] Dr Raj Mattu, a consultant cardiologist was dismissed by the Trust in 2010.
Bob Ainsworth (born 1952), former Labour Party politician, Member of Parliament for Coventry North East and Secretary of State for Defence [2] Alice Arnold (1881–1955), politician, trade unionist and first female mayor of Coventry [3] John Ash (1723–1798), English physician and founder of Birmingham General Hospital [4]
The plans for Birmingham and Solihull involved the development of four or five urgent care centres/integrated service hubs and moving GPs into A&E units. In Coventry and Warwickshire a new Acute Stroke Unit would be established at University Hospital Coventry [5] and the partnership was expected to become an accountable care system during 2017. [6]
Homerton University Hospital – Homerton, London; St Leonard's Hospital – Hackney, London; King George Hospital – Redbridge; Mile End Hospital – Tower Hamlets, Whitechapel; Moorfields Eye Hospital – London Borough of Islington; National Hospital for Neurology and Neurosurgery – Bloomsbury, London; Newham University Hospital ...
The Coventry and Warwickshire Hospital was a former hospital in Coventry, England, on Stoney Stanton Road on the northern edge of the city centre. The hospital was opened in 1867 and closed in 2006, to be replaced by the new University Hospital Coventry sited about 4 miles (6.4 km) north east of the centre.
The Trust developed Stratford Hospital with cancer and an eye ward built at the site of the existing hospital on Arden Street at a cost of £22 million. [10] This was partly financed by a Section 106 agreement with Coventry City Council , based on increased service demand from residents in new development, a £1,500 levy on each new dwelling in ...
Plans for a workhouse hospital were submitted in 1845, and in 1871 the Local Government Board approved a plan for an infectious diseases hospital (known first as the Poor Law Institution, and later until 1929, [110] the Coventry Poor Law Hospital) at the workhouse. By 1888 there was an infirmary with seven wards, but due to its inadequacy in ...