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  2. Leeds General Infirmary - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Leeds_General_Infirmary

    Its previous name The General Infirmary at Leeds is still sometimes used. [1] [2] The LGI is a specialist centre for a number of services, including the regional Major Trauma Centre and hand transplants. It also provides many general acute services like A&E, intensive care and high dependency units, maternity and state-of-the-art operating ...

  3. Leeds Teaching Hospitals NHS Trust - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Leeds_Teaching_Hospitals...

    Jubilee wing, Leeds General Infirmary. It provides services for the population of Leeds and surrounding areas, and is a regional centre for a range of services including cancer, neurosurgery, heart surgery, liver and kidney transplantation. In 2009 it was the largest NHS trust in England, [3] and now employs over 18,000 staff on seven main sites.

  4. Charles Thackray - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Charles_Thackray

    Leeds was a centre of high-calibre surgeons, many of whom made their names at the Infirmary; best known was Berkeley Moynihan, 1st Baron Moynihan, who achieved worldwide recognition for his contribution to abdominal surgery. It was Moynihan who first suggested to Charles Thackray that he should make instruments; and the firm, with its ...

  5. Nancy Roper - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nancy_Roper

    Nancy Roper was born on 29 September 1918, at Wetheral, near Carlisle, England, her mother [citation needed] was a nanny.Roper had wanted to be a nurse as a child. Her initial training was as a registered sick children's nurse (gaining a gold medal at Booth Hall Hospital, Manchester).

  6. Olive Scott - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Olive_Scott

    She moved to Leeds after her husband was appointed professor at the University of Leeds in 1961, [1] and began working at Leeds General Infirmary. [3] In 1966, Scott was appointed by Killingbeck Hospital as a consultant paediatric cardiologist; she was the first person in Britain to hold such a position.

  7. St James's University Hospital - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/St_James's_University_Hospital

    Since 2010, all Children's Services have been consolidated at the Leeds General Infirmary across the city, also managed by the Leeds Teaching Hospitals NHS Trust. [12] As part of Leeds Teaching Hospitals Hospitals of the Future program, [13] the Centre for Laboratory Medicine (CfLM)] opened in September 2023 at the hospital. [14]

  8. Eileen Skellern - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eileen_Skellern

    Flora Eileen Skellern was born on 14 June 1923 in Stone, Staffordshire to Flora (née Poole) and Willis Arthur Skellern, a commercial traveller. After attending Retford High School for Girls in Nottinghamshire she went to train as a nurse at Leeds General Infirmary, qualified in 1944, and worked there, first as a staff nurse, then in 1946 as a sister on a ward where there were some psychiatric ...

  9. Colin Norris - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Colin_Norris

    At the time of the murders, Norris worked at Leeds General Infirmary and St James's University Hospital in Leeds, having qualified as a nurse only a year earlier. [ 6 ] [ 14 ] [ 15 ] Suspicions were raised when Norris predicted the death of one patient, Ethel Hall, saying to a fellow nurse hours before: "I predict 5:15 a.m. as being the time ...