Queen Elizabeth II Health Sciences Centre

Queen Elizabeth II Health Sciences Centre
Capital District Health Authority
Halifax Infirmary
Queen Elizabeth II Health Sciences Centre is located in Nova Scotia
Queen Elizabeth II Health Sciences Centre
Location in Nova Scotia
Geography
Location1276 South Park Street
Halifax, Nova Scotia, Canada
B3H 2Y9
Coordinates44°38′20″N 63°34′45″W / 44.638889°N 63.579167°W / 44.638889; -63.579167
Organisation
Care systemMedicare
TypeTeaching
Affiliated universityDalhousie University Faculty of Medicine
Services
Emergency departmentTertiary trauma centre (Highest Level I)
HelipadTC LID: CHQE
History
Opened1997 (amalgamation)
Links
Websitehttp://www.cdha.nshealth.ca/

Queen Elizabeth II Health Sciences Centre, in Halifax, Nova Scotia, Canada, is a large teaching hospital and Level 1 Trauma Centre affiliated with Dalhousie University. The QEII cares for adult patients. Pediatric patients within the region are cared for at the IWK Health Centre. Administratively, the QEII is part of the Nova Scotia Health Authority.

History

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The Queen Elizabeth II Health Sciences Centre was formed by an order in council during a health care administration reorganization in 1994. The amalgamation was formalized by legislation in 1995–96. The current hospital, opened by Elizabeth II, Queen of Canada, on 15 August 1994,[1] is an amalgamation of four[2] formerly independent hospitals and health care centres; the Victoria General Hospital, the Camp Hill Medical Centre, the Cancer Treatment Research Foundation, and the Nova Scotia Rehabilitation Centre. The former Halifax Infirmary and Camp Hill Hospital had previously merged to form the Camp Hill Medical Centre in 1988.

The Halifax Infirmary was established by the Sisters of Charity of Saint Vincent de Paul in 1886 with a new building constructed at the intersection of Queen and Morris Streets in 1933. The Sisters of Charity operated the hospital until it was taken over by the provincial government in 1973. Until 1973, the Halifax Infirmary functioned largely as the city's Roman Catholic hospital. The building was closed when the present Halifax Infirmary on Summer Street opened in 1998; the "new Infirmary" has consolidated all emergency and outpatient services for the Queen Elizabeth II Health Sciences Centre, eliminating duplication between the Infirmary and Victoria General.

Camp Hill Hospital was founded by the Canadian military in 1917 as temporary lodgings for casualties of the First World War. It was constructed on the east side of Robie Street across from Cherry Street and was expanded repeatedly throughout the years. In 1971 the City of Halifax founded the Abbie J. Lane hospital adjacent to Camp Hill on the corner of Jubilee Road (now Veteran's Memorial Lane) and Summer Street. In 1987 the Camp Hill Veterans' Memorial building was opened, and the original Camp Hill facilities were subsequently demolished. The new Veteran's Memorial Building, the Abbie J. Lane Hospital, and the Halifax Infirmary on Queen Street were merged to form the Camp Hill Medical Centre. By 1992, planning had begun for construction of the new Halifax Infirmary building to replace the aging Queen Street facilities and relocate the Infirmary to the Camp Hill Medical Centre Summer Street campus.

VG hospital ward, 1910 Notman Studio

The Victoria General Hospital was established in 1887 by the City of Halifax and the provincial government when the former City and Provincial Hospital at the same site (Peter McGuigan, The Historic South End Halifax) was renamed; the City and Provincial Hospital having been established in 1859. In 1948, a new Victoria General Hospital was opened immediately east of the land which would eventually become home to the IWK Health Centre, a children's hospital, on a block bounded by Tower Road, University Avenue, and South Street, and was the largest hospital in the province in terms of both staff and bed capacity. A hospital parking area was established in the lot between Tower Road and South Park Street; in the 1980s the lot was expanded to physically join with the hospital facilities, effectively dividing Tower Road into two sections north and south of the facility. Historically, the VG, as it is called, was aligned with the Dalhousie University Faculty of Medicine as the province's only teaching hospital. The Victoria General Hospital's emergency and outpatient services were closed and consolidated at the new Infirmary site in 1998.

The pipes in some parts of the QEII have been contaminated with legionella bacteria since the 1980s, which has rendered water in some buildings undrinkable.[3]

Physical components

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Queen Elizabeth II Health Sciences Centre - Bethune Building (foreground); Centennial Building is visible in the background

The QEII Health Sciences Centre is spread across 10 buildings, which now comprise two geographically separate campuses (formally termed "sites") on the Halifax Peninsula.

  • Halifax Infirmary site buildings with amenities and services[4]
    • Abbie J. Lane Memorial Building (mental health/family medicine)
    • Camp Hill Veterans' Memorial Building (veterans health services, administered on behalf of Veterans Affairs Canada)
    • Halifax Infirmary (inpatient services, outpatient clinics)
    • Charles V. Keating Emergency and Trauma Centre[5]
    • Gift Shops/Convenience Stores/Drug Stores
    • Libraries
    • Parking
    • Places of Prayer and Meditation
    • Shuttle Service (free)
    • Spiritual Care
  • Victoria General site buildings
    • Bethune Building (administrative offices, patient services and clinics)
    • Centennial Building (inpatient and outpatient services)
    • Centre for Clinical Research (resource centre for all QEII-based health research, affiliated with Dalhousie University Faculty of Medicine)
    • Dickson Building (Nova Scotia Cancer Centre, Specimen Collection Services)
    • Mackenzie Building (Department of Pathology and Laboratory Medicine)
    • Nova Scotia Rehabilitation Centre (physical rehabilitation)
    • Victoria Building (inpatient and outpatient services)

Notable deaths

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See also

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References

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  1. ^ MacKenzie, Barry (5 May 2021), "Prince Philip's Atlantic Canadian Legacy", Acadiensis, retrieved 15 August 2022
  2. ^ "Queen Elizabeth II Health Sciences Centre Act". Retrieved 2008-08-11.
  3. ^ "Victoria General hospital plagued by problems since the 1980s". CBC News. 25 September 2015.
  4. ^ "Nova Scotia Health Authority".
  5. ^ "Nova Scotia Health Authority".
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