Royal Alexandra Hospital (Paisley)

Coordinates: 55°50′06″N 4°26′17″W / 55.835°N 4.438°W / 55.835; -4.438

Royal Alexandra Hospital
NHS Greater Glasgow and Clyde Hospital Trust
Geography
Location Paisley, Renfrewshire, Scotland, United Kingdom
Organisation
Care system Public NHS
Hospital type General Hospital
Affiliated university University of Glasgow & University of West of Scotland
Services
Emergency department Yes Accident & Emergency
Beds 760
History
Founded 1986 [1]
Links
Lists Hospitals in Scotland

The Royal Alexandra Hospital is the main hospital in Paisley serving a large catchment area as much as 200,000 from Renfrewshire, stretching all the way to Oban and Argyll.[1][2] The hospital is owned and run by NHS Greater Glasgow and Clyde, previously NHS Argyll & Clyde. The hospital was officially opened by Princess Alexandra in May 1988.

Facilities

The hospital has 760 staffed beds.[3]

Royal Alexandra provides the local catchment area with many services. These include: an A&E department; psychiatric; general medical and surgical services; trauma and emergency surgery centre; maternity unit and a children's ward, although it is still undecided whether the children's ward will be shut down.[4] The hospital contains the only consultant-led maternity unit for the whole south Clyde area, after this was done away with at Inverclyde Royal Hospital.[5] Both Inverclyde Royal and the Vale of Leven Hospital retain midwife-led community maternity units. The hospital also received some re-located services from Vale of Leven Hospital in Alexandria as part of a shuffle. Nonetheless, other services from this hospital will re-locate to Southern General in Glasgow to help balance this out fairly.

Glasgow Airport bombing

The hospital received patients from the 2007 Glasgow International Airport attack, including one of the suspects who was taken to the hospital under arrest with severe burns. Parts of the hospital were later evacuated when a suspect device, originally believed to be a suicide belt, was discovered on the suspect.[6] On the afternoon of 1 July a controlled explosion of a car was carried out in the car park of the hospital.[7]

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 6/2/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.