Royal South Hants Hospital

Royal South Hants Hospital
Shown in Southampton
Geography
Location Bevois Valley, Southampton, England, United Kingdom
Coordinates 50°54′45″N 1°23′48″W / 50.9126°N 1.3968°W / 50.9126; -1.3968Coordinates: 50°54′45″N 1°23′48″W / 50.9126°N 1.3968°W / 50.9126; -1.3968
Organisation
Care system Public NHS
Hospital type Community hospital
Affiliated university University of Southampton
Services
Emergency department No Accident & Emergency
Beds 332 (originally)
History
Founded 1835
Links
Website www.royalsouthhantshospital.nhs.uk
Lists Hospitals in England

The Royal South Hants Hospital, known locally as "The RSH", is a Community Health Campus in Southampton. The buildings and facilities are managed by NHS Property Services Ltd. Service Providers who operate at the site include: Solent NHS Trust, Care UK, In Health, Solent Medical Services and Alliance Medical. It was previously managed by Southampton University Hospitals NHS Trust (now University Hospital Southampton) and still retains a few University Hospital departments. The campus also hosts some specialist visiting clinics from Southampton General and other Hospitals and occasionally visiting mobile services for Breast Screening and the National Blood Transfusion Service.

History

The hospital was founded as the Royal South Hampshire Infirmary in 1835,[1] and relocated several times before settling at its current location in the heart of the Nicholstown New Town area of Southampton. The foundation stone was laid on 10 July 1843,[1] and the hospital opened on its present site in 1844.[1]

Previous locations; St Mary Street (1838–1844) & Fanshawe Street (1844?-c.1978) [2]

In 1851, donations from doctors Joseph and William Bullar funded additional wards for the hospital, named the Bullar Wards.[3] The hospital obtained its current name in 1965, and was funded by public subscription as part of a wave of voluntary hospitals throughout the country.[3] The hospital chapel was built in 1857, and is now a grade II listed building.[3]

In 1868 a new wing, named the Eyre Crabbe Wing and housing 36 beds, was erected.[1] The Crabbe wards are located on the East side of the hospital campus.[3] In 1896, another new wing, containing a further two wards, operating theatres, cottages to house patients with infectious diseases and a mortuary were added at a cost of £29 000.[3] This new wing was opened on 7 February 1900 by Princess Henry of Battenberg, and named the Victoria Jubilee Wing.[4]

With the formation of the National Health Service in 1948, the management of the RSH was transferred to the new public service.[3]

In 1979, the Department of Psychiatry building, an inpatient psychiatric facility, was built along with residential accommodation for healthcare staff. This closed in 2010 and has been replaced by Antelope House.[5] In the same year, the Outpatients Centre building was opened, modelled on the Mayo Clinic in the United States.[3] In 1971 the RSH housed 332 beds and treated 8000 inpatients and 173 000 outpatients.[1]

The chapel fell out of use in 1992.[3] Management of the hospital came under Southampton University Hospitals NHS Trust when the trust was formed in 1993.

Redevelopment as a community hospital

On 31 March 2007 the hospital was transferred to Southampton City Primary Care Trust with several services transferring to Southampton General Hospital and the Princess Anne Hospital, and new services being opened on the RSH site.

Hepatology, Gastroenterology and Gastrointestinal outpatients and Endoscopy services transferred to Southampton General Hospital, while the breast surgery, breast imaging and breast screening services moved to the Princess Anne.[3] The Genito-urinary medicine, diabetes screening and resource centre, Chronic pain and Elderly care outpatients services, non-specialist endoscopy, direct access therapies and interface outpatient clinics all remained at the RSH site, along with the restaurant and canteen (which will be refurbished), shop and coffee bar.[3] New services being introduced on the RSH site include a new GP practice, three dental surgeries, Minor injuries Centre , a new adult mental health unit (to be run by Hampshire Partnership NHS Trust) and an independent sector treatment centre to be operated by the Partnership Health Group.[3] The primary care trust also plan to reopen the chapel.[3]

An new adult mental health unit called Antelope House opened in 2010, and houses 50 acute beds and 12 psychiatric intensive care beds in a new £20 million building.[6]

As of 2016 The buildings and facilities are managed by NHS Property Services Ltd. Service Providers who operate at the site include: Solent NHS Trust, Care UK, In Health, Solent Medical Services and Alliance Medical. It was previously managed by Southampton University Hospitals NHS Trust (now University Hospital Southampton) and still retains a few University Hospital departments. The campus also hosts some specialist visiting clinics from Southampton General and other Hospitals and occasionally visiting mobile services for Breast Screening and the National Blood Transfusion Service.

See also

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 11/12/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.