Dorset County Hospital NHS Foundation Trust
Dorset County Hospital | |
---|---|
Dorset County Hospital NHS Foundation Trust | |
Geography | |
Location | Dorchester, Dorset, England, United Kingdom |
Coordinates | 50°42′46″N 2°26′44″W / 50.7127°N 2.4456°WCoordinates: 50°42′46″N 2°26′44″W / 50.7127°N 2.4456°W |
Organisation | |
Care system | Public NHS |
Hospital type | District General |
Services | |
Emergency department | Yes Accident & Emergency |
Beds | 500 |
History | |
Founded | 1840 |
Links | |
Website | http://www.dchft.nhs.uk/Pages/home1.aspx |
Lists | Hospitals in England |
Dorset County Hospital NHS Foundation Trust runs Dorset County Hospital, an NHS district general hospital in the town of Dorchester, Dorset, England. The hospital is the hub of the district's inpatient facilities but community hospitals, formerly owned by the North and South West Dorset Primary Care Groups are situated in the surrounding major towns and provide the 'spokes' to the central unit. Dorset County Hospital has 500 beds.
Origins
The hospital was founded in 1840 and the first purpose-built buildings were constructed in 1841 south of Princes Street in the town centre.[1] The site's facilities continued to expand through the 20th century in a piecemeal fashion, leaving a crowded site with several old buildings unsuitable for modern clinical care. It was thus that a site for a new purpose-built District General Hospital for the area was identified to the west of the town centre, on the land sandwiched between Bridport Road, Damer's Road, Damer's First School and the Bristol to Weymouth railway line. This was adjacent to Damer's Hospital, originally the workhouse.
Relocation
Construction of the first phases on the new site took place in the late 1980s, with Phase One at the north of the site adjacent to Bridport Road and the separate Children's Centre at the south of the site adjacent to Damer's Road. Phase One has a distinctive red and blue external colour scheme. Upon opening, Phase One was known as West Dorset General Hospital, to differentiate it from the Somerleigh Road site, from which several services continued to operate, and which continued to be known as Dorset County Hospital.
Phase Two was constructed in the mid-1990s, along with the Hospital Link Road (named Williams Avenue), connecting Bridport and Damer's Roads and giving access to the hospital. Phase Two's completion enabled all services to relocate from Princes Street, as well some facilities (including Accident and Emergency, which had not previously been present in Dorchester) from Weymouth. The hospital was officially opened by Her Majesty the Queen on 8 May 1998. The Somerleigh Road site has subsequently been redeveloped for housing, a retirement home, public car parking and tennis courts relocated from the adjacent Borough Gardens.
Performance
In the Sunday Times Good Hospital Guide 2004, West Dorset's patient satisfaction rating is bettered by only one trust in England[2] and it scores well with respect to most of the other performance indicators. The mortality rate is 8% below the expected level and is among the best 30 nationally. The trust is just one of five in England where all inpatients are admitted within six months of referral and the proportion of outpatients seen by a consultant within 13 weeks of referral is among the 30 highest. The trust's facilities are also very clean: it is ranked in the top ten in England for the high standards of cleanliness in the A&E department and in outpatients' toilets.[2]
In 2005 the hospital was awarded three-star status in the NHS's performance ratings.[3]
Future developments
Work has begun on a new £2m cardiac unit that will provide services such as cardiac catheterisation, which means that patients will no longer have to be transferred to Southampton General Hospital for this procedure. Other future plans for the hospital include the creation of a sensory room with lights, music and textured surfaces to stimulate young patients in Digby Court, the Trust's residential centre for children with complex learning disabilities. Improvements have also been made to the environment in Hardy Ward, the Stroke Unit.
Proposals to transfer the pathology department to a private provider were rejected in October 2014 after 11000 people signed a petition protesting against the plan.[4]
Services
The Trust's clinical services are organised into four directorates and provide the following services centralised on the Dorset County Hospital Site.
Emergency and medical services
- A & E
- Elderly Care
- General Medical Wards, Units and Specialities
- Neurology
- Dermatology
- Critical care (ITU, HDU, CCU)
- Renal (county-wide service)
- Clinical haematology
- Neurophysiology
Planned and surgical services
- Anaesthetics
- Day surgery
- Urology
- Ophthalmology
- ENT
- Outpatient (DCH & Weymouth)
- Theatres
- Trauma and orthopaedics
- Rheumatology
- General surgery
Family services
- Child health
- Gynaecology
- Maternity
- Oral, orthodontic & dental services
- Genitourinary medicine
Diagnostic services
- Pathology and haematology
- Medical physics
- Diagnostic imaging including spiral CT, MRI and nuclear medicine
The hospital is also recognised as a cancer unit for the provision of services for patients with gynaecological, breast, colorectal, urological, upper gastrointestinal, lung and haematological malignancies. While most chemotherapy is given locally, the radiotherapy centre is in the Cancer Centre at Poole Hospital.
See also
References
- ↑ Draper, 1992
- 1 2 West Dorset General Hospitals NHS Trust
- ↑ Healthcare Commission ratings
- ↑ "Pathology department saved as community rejects privatisation agenda". Dorset Eye. 8 October 2014. Retrieved 10 October 2014.
- Draper, J. 1992 Dorchester: An illustrated history Wimborne: Dovecote Press