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Upon receiving the keys to the hospital Bevan was given a tour of the hospital by the Matron Ann Dolan. Dolan had been appointed as matron before the hospital had officially opened in 1929, and was pictured alongside Bevan and Diggory in the news stories of 1948. [4] Sylvia Diggory (née Beckingham), then 13, was the first NHS patient.
The Infirmary, Manchester Convalescent Home, St Mary's, the Royal Eye Hospital, the Dental Hospital and the Foot Hospital in Manchester were entitled The United Manchester Hospitals when they were taken into the National Health Service in 1948 and run by one hospital management committee. [1] Sir Mike Deegan was Chief Executive from 2001. [2]
Spire Cheshire Hospital (independent) – Warrington; St Catherine's Health Centre, Merseyside; St Helens Hospital – Merseyside [6] Saint Mary's Hospital, Manchester – Manchester; Stepping Hill Hospital – Stockport; Tameside General Hospital – Ashton-under-Lyne; Trafford General Hospital – Davyhulme, Manchester – formerly Park Hospital
The hospital joined the National Health Service in 1948. [3] In 1956, Joy Division singer Ian Curtis was born at the Hospital [4] and in 1958, Andy Gibb, the brother of the Bee Gees, was born. [5] In October 1985, it was converted for use as a geriatric hospital, and later became the base for Trafford's Child and Adolescent Mental Health ...
Blue Plaque, Trafford General Hospital. Trafford General Hospital opened in 1929 and was originally called Davyhulme Park Hospital. It became the first NHS hospital in 1948. [7] A blue plaque commemorating the birth of the NHS on 5th July 1948 can be found on display at the hospital entrance.
Community care is provided by the hospital trusts in Manchester, and Tameside Bridgewater Community Healthcare NHS Foundation Trust. Hospice care is provided by St Ann's Hospice . A programme which provided more than 50,000 extra GP appointments in central Manchester, Bury and Heywood and Middleton in 2014 brought a 3% reduction in accident and ...
The trust is the main provider of hospital care to approximately 750,000 people in the areas covered by the Manchester & Trafford Local Care Organisations. [14] It is also the lead provider of multiple specialist services to the 2.8 million people in the Greater Manchester conurbation [14] including:
Dunham Massey Hall, usually known simply as Dunham Massey, [1] is an English country house in the parish of Dunham Massey in the district of Trafford, near Altrincham, Greater Manchester. During World War I it was temporarily used as the Stamford Military Hospital. It was designated a Grade I listed building on 5 March 1959.