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The Queen Elizabeth Hospital Birmingham is a major, 1,215 bed, tertiary NHS and military hospital in the Edgbaston area of Birmingham, situated very close to the University of Birmingham. The hospital, which cost £545 million to construct, opened on 16 June 2010, replacing the previous Queen Elizabeth Hospital and Selly Oak Hospital .
The Trust had been forced to fully re-open the former Queen Elizabeth Hospital, which was supposed to be closed after the new site was opened in 2010. [24] In October 2014 Julie Moore called for a major overhaul of financial rules to help popular hospitals cope with the extra demand their reputations attract. [25]
The trust was formed by the acquisition of the acquisition of Queen Elizabeth Hospital by Lewisham Healthcare NHS Trust upon the dissolution of South London Healthcare NHS Trust. Despite extensive local opposition and legal challenges in Lewisham, the merger was approved by Secretary of State for Health Jeremy Hunt on 26 September 2013. [3]
The trust spent £3.2 million on agency staff in 2014/5. [4] It expects a deficit of £7.5 million for 2015/6. [5] In 2022 it was recognised as a Global Digital Exemplar leader. [6] It set up a pharmacist-led clinic for patients with both heart failure and diabetes, to optimise their medications in 2022. [7]
The Queen Elizabeth Hospital in King's Lynn, Norfolk, said the system had been taken up by 70% of patients. One hundred more people had been seen each week in November compared with June 2023, a ...
Queen Elizabeth Hospital in King's Lynn, Norfolk, England.It is located on the outskirts of King's Lynn, to the eastern edge of the town. The catchment area of the Queen Elizabeth Hospital covers the West Norfolk area, South Lincolnshire and Northern part of Fenland District, Cambridgeshire, an area of approximately 1500 km 2 and 250,000 people.
Queen Elizabeth Hospital Birmingham (since 2010), England Queen Elizabeth Hospital Birmingham (1933–2010) Queen Elizabeth's Hospital , a school in Clifton, Bristol, England
The hospital's name originates from the Queen Elizabeth Military Hospital, which occupied the site from 1977 until its closure in 1995, and was named after Queen Elizabeth The Queen Mother (who opened the hospital on 1 November 1978).