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University Hospital Galway is the Saolta Model 4 Hospital delivering 24/7 emergency medicine, acute medicine, acute surgery, critical care, maternity, neonatal, paediatric, cancer, laboratory and radiology alongside a wide range of tertiary referral services for the Saolta Group.
The Franciscan Missionaries of the Divine Motherhood opened a nursing home at "Mount Pleasant" in 1943, and John Dignan, the bishop of the Roman Catholic Diocese of Clonfert, invited them to found a hospital, which opened on 9 April 1945. [2] The nuns named their hospital after Portiuncula in Italy, the place where Franciscanism began. [3]
University Hospital Galway, Galway; County Leitrim. Our Lady's Hospital, Manorhamilton; St Patricks Community Hospital, Carrick-on-Shannon [1] County Mayo
The grouping of hospitals was announced by Ireland's then Minister for Health, Dr. James Reilly, T.D., in May 2013, as part of a restructure of Irish public hospitals and a goal of delivering better patient care. [1] The Group was given responsibility for the following hospitals: [1] [2] University Hospital Galway; Letterkenny University Hospital
The hospital was founded by surgeons Joseph Sheehan and Jimmy Sheehan, who had established the Blackrock Clinic in Dublin. [2] It was built at a cost of €100 million and opened in June 2004. [3] It brought radiation therapy, cardiac surgery and PET/CT scanning to the west of Ireland for the first time. [3]
University Hospital Galway This page was last edited on 26 July 2021, at 04:14 (UTC). Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution ...
The Bon Secours Hospital, Galway is a private hospital in County Galway, Ireland. The hospital is part of Bon Secours Mercy Health. [1] This includes sister hospitals in Cork, Dublin, Limerick and Tralee. [2] The hospital sees over 18,000 patients per annum, comprising 6,000 in-patients and 12,000 day-cases. [3]
University Hospital Galway is one of Ireland's largest hospitals, dealing with over two hundred thousand patients in 2007. In 2007, [15] for GP services, 31% were seen without an appointment, 38% received an appointment the same day, 28% received a next day appointment and 3% had to wait over two days to be seen.