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The hospital has its origins in the Denbighshire Dispensary which became the first voluntary hospital in Wales when it was established in Park Street in 1807. [1] A purpose-built facility, which was designed by Thomas Harrison, was built in Park Street between 1810 and 1813. [2]
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No appointment is needed, and waiting times are often shorter than for equivalent injuries at emergency departments. In 1994, a minor injuries unit opened at the Western General Hospital in Edinburgh which was the first nurse-led unit in Scotland. [1] A two-year evaluation showed the service was run at an average cost of £33 per patient visit. [2]
It became an acute general hospital in the 1930s, a hospital managed by GPs in the 1950s and a community hospital in the 1980s. [1] In July 2012 the health board announced that the minor injuries unit would close and X-ray services would no longer be provided.
The North Wales Hospital (Welsh: Ysbyty Gogledd Cymru) is a Grade II* listed building in Denbigh, Denbighshire, Wales. Designed by architect Thomas Fulljames, building started in 1844 and completed in 1848. Initially a hospital for up to 200 people with psychiatric illness, by the mid-20th century it housed 1,500 patients.
The Conwy & Denbighshire NHS Trust ran one major acute hospital (Glan Clwyd Hospital), two further acute hospitals (H.M. Stanley in St. Asaph), and Abergele Hospital, 6 community hospitals, and mental health units. It was confirmed in April 2008 that the Conwy & Denbighshire NHS Trust intended to merge with the North East Wales NHS Trust.
Denbigh Community Hospital; G. Glan Clwyd Hospital; H. ... Ruthin Community Hospital This page was last edited on 3 February 2019, at 19:53 (UTC). ...
Delayed: Non-life-threatening injuries; needs medical attention, but treatment can be delayed a few hours Minor: Minor injuries; may need medical attention in the next few days ("the walking wounded") Deceased or expectant: Deceased, or injuries so severe that life-saving treatment cannot be provided with the resources available