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Lincoln County Hospital

Coordinates: 53°14′00″N 0°31′08″W / 53.2333°N 0.518775°W / 53.2333; -0.518775
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Lincoln County Hospital
United Lincolnshire Hospitals NHS Trust
East side of the hospital seen from Lincoln Cathedral
Lincoln County Hospital is located in Lincolnshire
Lincoln County Hospital
Shown in Lincolnshire
Geography
LocationGreetwell Road, Lincoln, Lincolnshire, England
Organisation
Care systemNHS England
TypeDistrict General
Affiliated universityUniversity of Nottingham
Services
Emergency departmentYes
Beds602
History
Opened1776
Links
Websitewww.ulh.nhs.uk/hospitals/lincoln-county
ListsHospitals in England

Lincoln County Hospital is a large district general hospital on the eastern edge of north-east Lincoln, England. It is the largest hospital in Lincolnshire, and offers the most comprehensive services, in Lincolnshire. It is managed by the United Lincolnshire Hospitals NHS Trust.

History

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Hospital buildings dating back to 1878

Early history

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The hospital has its origins in some rented accommodation in St Swithin's which opened in November 1769.[1] A purpose-built facility was designed by John Carr and William Lumby and built in Drury Lane between 1776 and 1777.[2]

Following issues with the nursing care, the Ladies' Nursing Fund Committee was established in 1864 to provide a better quality of nursing staff to the hospital. This arrangement only lasted for three years, but the Bromhead Institution for Nurses and the Bromhead Nursing Home became well established in Lincoln.[3]

A new site was identified on Sewell Road and purchased in 1875.[4] A new building, designed by Alexander Graham, was built on the new site and completed in 1878.[4] The hospital joined the National Health Service in 1948.[4]

Construction

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Charles Pelham, 4th Earl of Yarborough opened a new X-ray department on Friday 7 April 1922.[5]

In the late 1930s £100,000 of buildings were added in two stages. The first stage cost £57,000, completed by April 1939.[6]

Construction work, undertaken by Shepherd Building Group on a maternity unit commenced on site on 2 May 1966. It involved 112 beds, including 78 consultant beds, 26 general practitioner beds, and eight private patients beds. There was also a delivery suite. The unit had a special care unit with 21 cots on the sixth floor, and ante-natal clinic, and midwifery training school on the ground floor. The total cost was £800,000.[7] The seven-storey maternity unit was opened by Princess Margaret, Countess of Snowdon on 4 December 1968,[8][9] who later visited Scunthorpe.[10]

Construction of Phase One of the main hospital, undertaken by Shepherd Building Group, began at the end of July 1981.[11] There were two main buildings, with 112 beds.[12] Phase One cost £16.7m and involved four new operating theatres. Some 150 more staff were needed, with one hundred more nurses. At the time, it was difficult to find enough experienced theatre staff.[13] It opened to the public in April 1985, after ward staff and theatre staff moved from St George's Hospital.[14] Phase One was officially opened on the morning of 23 July 1985 by Diana, Princess of Wales. Diana had arrived at RAF Scampton in a Hawker Siddeley Andover, with two thousand people lining the route from Scampton.[15][16] Diana later visited North Hykeham in the afternoon.[17]

Construction of Phase Two of the hospital, undertaken by Higgs and Hill Northern, started on 7 December 1989.[18][19] It involved a series of surgical wards, six operating theatres, and a new A&E. There were 168 new acute beds.[20][21] Phase two was completed at a cost of £24 million. It partly opened to the public in mid-February 1993 and fully opened to the public in April 1993.[22][23] It was officially opened by Princess Anne on the afternoon of 15 September 1993,[24][25] having earlier visited Willoughby, Lincolnshire and North Somercotes.[26]

The Lincolnshire Department of Oncology was opened by Princess Alexandra on the afternoon of Wednesday October 10 2001.[27]

The Princess Royal opened a new extension on the afternoon of Wednesday 16 March 2005, after earlier visiting Hough-on-the-Hill and Sleaford.[28]

Recent history

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The Lincoln Hospitals' Radio Service, which first broadcast from St George's Hospital in December 1979, moved to Lincoln County Hospital in 1988. Its founder, Ray Drury, had been a cartoonist with the Daily Express.[29]

On 5 November 1975, 10 year old Stephen Jackson-Parr, of Mayfield Avenue in Gainsborough, was admitted to the hospital after being seriously mauled by a circus lion that had escaped near Ropery Road. [30] He was found almost naked, his shirt having been ripped from his back. Four lions from Robert Brothers Circus had escaped. The boy was at a nearby bonfire. The lions were tracked down and shot with tranquilliser darts.[31] The day before, a worker at a safari park, 22 year old Sidney Bamford, had been killed by a tiger called Yellow Tag.[32] The matter was raised in parliament on 10 November 1975 by Marcus Kimball the local Member of Parliament.[33] Stephen was seriously ill for many days in the intensive care unit, and died on 20 November 1975.[34]

On 14 July 1977, 50 children were admitted to the hospital when a crop sprayer aircraft had mistakenly flown over Branston County Junior School playground, spraying Systox and Aphox.[35]

On 21 August 1987, Lynn Eyre, of Tobruk Close, gave birth to quadruplets, three boys and a girl.[36][37][38]

In January 2008, there was an outbreak of norovirus, known as the 'vomiting bug'; an outbreak also occurred at the Pilgrim Hospital.[39]

In 2013, a review by Professor Sir Bruce Keogh found that there was a significant backlog of complaints and that there had been a noticeable increase in incidents when the ombudsman had to intervene to investigate complaints that had not been followed up. Accordingly Keogh found that the complaints handling system was not fit for purpose. The trust implemented a new complaints system in response.[40][41][42]

Notable staff

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Services

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The University of Nottingham Medical School has approximately 330 nursing students and 30 midwifery students at its Lincoln Education Centre.[46] Lincolnshire and Nottinghamshire share the Lincolnshire & Nottinghamshire Air Ambulance.[47]

References

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  1. ^ "Lincoln County Hospital". National Archives. Retrieved 31 October 2018.
  2. ^ "Chad Varah House, formerly Lincoln Theological College". Retrieved 31 October 2018.
  3. ^ "Records of the Bromhead Institution for Nurses and the Bromhead Nursing Home, Lincoln". The National Archives. 6 May 2024. Retrieved 6 May 2024.
  4. ^ a b c "Lincoln County Hospital". Lincs to the Past. Retrieved 31 October 2018.
  5. ^ Times Saturday April 8 1922, page 9
  6. ^ Times Tuesday April 18 1939, page 17
  7. ^ Lincolnshire Echo Thursday 16 March 1967, page 7
  8. ^ Lincolnshire Echo Wednesday 4 December 1968, page 6
  9. ^ Sleaford Standard Friday 6 December 1968, page 1
  10. ^ Times Thursday December 5 1968, page 13
  11. ^ Lincolnshire Echo Tuesday 10 July 1979, page 7
  12. ^ Lincolnshire Echo Wednesday 24 June 1981, page 1
  13. ^ Lincolnshire Echo Saturday 1 December 1984, page 4
  14. ^ Lincolnshire Echo Thursday 4 April 1985, page 9
  15. ^ Lincolnshire Echo Tuesday 23 July 1985, page 1
  16. ^ Grimsby Daily Telegraph Tuesday 23 July 1985, page 1
  17. ^ Times Wednesday July 24 1985, page 14
  18. ^ Lincolnshire Echo Tuesday 5 June 1990, page 23
  19. ^ Lincolnshire Echo Tuesday 1 December 1992, page 39
  20. ^ Lincolnshire Echo Thursday 7 December 1989, page 9
  21. ^ Lincolnshire Echo Tuesday 5 December 1989, page 25
  22. ^ Lincolnshire Echo Monday 11 January 1993, page 11
  23. ^ Lincolnshire Echo Monday 15 February 1993, page 2
  24. ^ Lincolnshire Echo Tuesday 13 July 1993, page 9
  25. ^ Lincolnshire Echo Thursday 16 September 1993, page 1
  26. ^ Times Thursday September 16 1993, page 18
  27. ^ Times Thursday October 11 2001, page 22
  28. ^ Times Thursday March 17 2005, page 65
  29. ^ "Lincoln City Radio". Cylex. Retrieved 31 October 2018.
  30. ^ Lincolnshire Echo Thursday 6 November 1975, page 1
  31. ^ Times Friday November 7 1975, page 3
  32. ^ Times Thursday November 6 1975, page 3
  33. ^ Lion incident 1975
  34. ^ Lincolnshire Echo Friday 21 November 1975, page 1
  35. ^ Times Friday July 15 1977, page 4
  36. ^ Times Monday August 24 1987, page 3
  37. ^ Nottingham Evening Post Monday 24 August 1987, page 10
  38. ^ Lincolnshire Echo Tuesday 25 August 1987, page 1
  39. ^ Times Saturday January 12 2008, page 27
  40. ^ "Hospitals revamp complaints system". BBC. 19 October 2013. Retrieved 3 September 2018.
  41. ^ "Complaints handling" (PDF). Lincolnshire County Council. Retrieved 31 October 2018.
  42. ^ "United Lincolnshire Hospitals NHS Trust" (PDF). Care Quality Commission. Retrieved 31 October 2018.
  43. ^ a b Rogers, Sarah (2022). 'A Maker of Matrons’? A study of Eva Lückes’s influence on a generation of nurse leaders:1880–1919' (Unpublished PhD thesis, University of Huddersfield, April 2022)
  44. ^ Wildman, Stuart (29 July 2022). "'Were they to have petticoat government in the hospital?' The reform of nursing in nineteenth-century Lincoln". Women's History Review. 31 (5): 741–759. doi:10.1080/09612025.2021.1966891. ISSN 0961-2025.
  45. ^ "'Nurses of Note- Miss Cassandra M. Beachcroft'". The Nursing Record and Hospital World. 14: 213. 6 April 1895 – via RCN Archive.
  46. ^ "Undergraduate Nursing Courses - School of Health Sciences - The University of Nottingham". www.nottingham.ac.uk. Retrieved 3 September 2018.
  47. ^ "Lincs & Notts Air Ambulance is set to provide 24 hour care". Nottingham Post. 19 January 2018. Retrieved 31 January 2018.
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53°14′00″N 0°31′08″W / 53.2333°N 0.518775°W / 53.2333; -0.518775