Princess Royal Hospital (Haywards Heath)

Princess Royal Hospital
Brighton and Sussex University Hospitals NHS Trust

Princess Royal Hospital main entrance
Geography
Location Haywards Heath, West Sussex, England, United Kingdom
Organisation
Care system Public NHS
Hospital type Teaching
Affiliated university Brighton and Sussex Medical School
Services
Emergency department Yes Accident & Emergency
History
Founded 1991[1]
Links
Website http://www.bsuh.nhs.uk/hospitals/our-hospitals/princess-royal-hospital
Lists Hospitals in England

The Princess Royal Hospital is an acute, teaching, general hospital located in Haywards Heath, West Sussex, England.[2] It is the main hospital in the Mid Sussex district and is part of the Brighton and Sussex University Hospitals NHS Trust along with the larger Royal Sussex County Hospital and several other facilities, mostly in nearby Brighton.[3]

The hospital has a range of acute and chronic medicine departments, and works interdependently with the other hospitals in the trust to provide a complete service.[4]

History

The Princess Royal Hospital was purpose built to replace the aging Cuckfield and Haywards Heath hospitals, both located to the far side of Haywards Heath to the current hospital, in the grounds of St Francis Hospital, a mental hospital which had stood on the site since 1859, and was originally named the Sussex County Lunatic Asylum.[4]

The original St Francis hospital was closed and redeveloped for housing the 1990s.

Departments

The hospital has an emergency department (accident and emergency) for receiving patients, although it only accepts adult cases which will not require surgery, referring others (including children) to alternative departments at the Royal Sussex County Hospital or East Surrey Hospital. It also has a full maternity and gynecology service.

The hospital is a regional centre for neurology, with the specialist Hurstwood Park Regional Centre for Neurosciences based at the hospital.[5]

Princess Royal also has medical and surgical facilities, along with adult intensive care, ear, nose & throat, diabetic medicine, geriatrics, haemotology, urology and cardiac services.[6]

Performance

As a trust (including the other sites), the hospital was rated 6th best in the country for safety, and in the top 5% for hospital survival rates, in the year 2009-10.[5]

Under threat

The hospital has been considered by many in the past few years of being under threat [7] of having to offer very reduced services.[8]

See also

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 10/23/2015. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.