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Hull Royal Infirmary is a tertiary teaching hospital and is one of the two main hospitals for Kingston upon Hull (the other being Castle Hill Hospital in nearby Cottingham). It is situated on Anlaby Road, just outside the city centre, and is run by Hull University Teaching Hospitals NHS Trust .
The Hull University Teaching Hospitals NHS Trust operates in the city of Hull and the East Riding of Yorkshire, England. The Trust was formed on 1 October 1999 by the merger of the East Yorkshire Hospitals and the Royal Hull Hospitals National Health Service Trusts. [1] It is based on two sites, Hull Royal Infirmary and Castle Hill Hospital ...
He subsequently became a Consultant Physician at the Hull Royal Infirmary. In 1915, he was elected as a Fellow of the Royal College of Physicians . In 1932, his description of a new "rocking" method of artificial respiration , which came to be known as the "Eve Method" and was adopted by the Royal Navy and by the Swedish Navy , brought Eve ...
Anlaby Road is the site of Hull Royal Infirmary, [2] Hull's main general hospital. It is an ancient route from Hull city centre via Carr Lane and crossing Ferensway leading to the western outer suburbs of Hull and the East Riding of Yorkshire villages of Anlaby, Kirk Ella and West Ella.
Hull Sanatorium, designed by Joseph Hirst, was built on the site of Cottingham Castle, a large castellated mansion which had burnt down in 1861, between 1913 and 1916. [1] In 1928 the City Hospital for infectious diseases moved from its original location on Hedon Road to newly erected buildings on the Hull Sanatorium site.
After a short spell in the Glasgow Eye Infirmary in 1946, [3] Miller was appointed a consultant ophthalmic surgeon at the Hull Royal Infirmary, but soon resigned when promised equipment and buildings did not materialise. [2]
The hospital was established as the Sutton Annexe to the Hull Royal Infirmary on a site donated by Sir Philip Reckitt, chairman of Reckitt and Sons, and was built between 1928 and 1931. [1] [2] [3] In 1963 the hospital had 208 beds. [1] After services transferred to the Castle Hill Hospital, the Princess Royal Hospital closed in summer 2008. [2]
It joined the National Health Service as the Western General Hospital in 1948 and, after services transferred to the Hull Royal Infirmary, it closed in 1966. [3] The building, which became known as the Haughton Building, [4] continued to be used by the Hull Royal Infirmary for storage purposes until it was demolished to make way for a helipad ...