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The laying of the foundation stone for the hospital was commemorated when Kenneth Clarke, Minister of Health unveiled a plaque on the site in 1988. [2] The new facility, which was built by Cementation, was intended to consolidate services previously provided by the Eversfield Hospital in St Leonards, and three hospitals in Hastings, the Buchanan Hospital, St Helens Hospital and the Royal East ...
The trust was established as East Sussex Hospitals NHS Trust on 1 April 2002, taking its current name on 13 May 2011. [3] [4]In 2021 the trust bought the private hospital Spire Sussex Hospital, which is physically linked to the trust's Conquest Hospital in Hastings.
Buckland Hospital – Dover; Conquest Hospital – Hastings, East Sussex; Crawley Hospital – Crawley, West Sussex; Darent Valley Hospital – Dartford, Kent; Eastbourne District General Hospital – Eastbourne, East Sussex; East Surrey Hospital – Redhill, Surrey; Epsom Cottage Hospital, Surrey; Epsom Hospital – Epsom; Farnham Hospital, Surrey
AOL
Before 2022 healthcare provision was the responsibility of seven Clinical Commissioning Groups covering: Brighton and Hove; Coastal West Sussex; Horsham and Mid Sussex; Crawley; Eastbourne Hailsham and Seaford; Hastings and Rother; High Weald; and Lewes-Havens from 2013 to 2020. From April 2020 they were merged into three covering East Sussex ...
This was founded to care for the poor of Hastings in 1839, on White Rock Road in Hastings. [1] [2] This became known as The General Infirmary. [1]Despite several extensions the hospital became too small, and in 1884 plans were drawn up to rebuild it and the hospital was renamed as Hastings, St Leonards' and East Sussex Hospital. [1]
In 1840 the Royal East Sussex Hospital was opened to provide care for the sick poor, this was renamed in 1887 as the Hastings, St Leonards and East Sussex Hospital. In 1923 it was rebuilt in Cambridge Road and renamed the Royal East Sussex Hospital. In 1993 this closed when the Conquest Hospital, was opened.
The hospital has its origins in a facility named after Richard de Wych, a former Bishop of Chichester, commissioned by West Sussex County Council in 1937 and built between 1938 and 1939. [1] At the start of the Second World War the Government designated it an Emergency Medical Service hospital and, by 1940, ten hutted wards had been added ...