Skip to content
Surf Wiki
Save to docs
geography/australia

From Surf Wiki (app.surf) — the open knowledge base

Royal Perth Hospital

Hospital in Perth, Western Australia

Royal Perth Hospital

Summary

Hospital in Perth, Western Australia

FieldValue
nameRoyal Perth Hospital
org_groupDepartment of Health
imageRoyal perth hosp 01 gnangarra.JPG
image_altRoyal Perth Hospital from Wellington Street
image_size225
captionRoyal Perth Hospital from Wellington Street
pushpin_map
pushpin_map_caption
logo
logo_size
locationWellington Street, Perth
regionCity of Perth
stateWestern Australia
countryAU
mapframe-zoom15
coordinates
address
healthcare
fundingPublic
typeTeaching
speciality
standards
emergencyYes
helipadYes
affiliation
patron
network
beds450
founded
closed
website
other_links
embedyes
designation1State Register of Heritage Places
designation1_offnameRoyal Perth Hospital Heritage Precinct
designation1_typeState Registered Place
designation1_date8 January 2016
designation1_number

| mapframe-zoom = 15

Royal Perth Hospital (RPH) is a 450-bed adult and teaching hospital located on the northeastern edge of the central business district of Perth, Western Australia.

History

The hospital traces its history back to the first colonial hospital, which was established in a tent on Garden Island, just off the coast of Western Australia, in 1829. In June 1830, the hospital tent was re-erected in Cathedral Avenue, Perth. From 1833 a more substantial colonial hospital operated for a short time from a rented room in a private house. Six years later, in December 1840, this was re-opened in a building formerly used as stables on the corner of St Georges Terrace and Irwin Street. The hospital commenced operations on the corner of Murray Street and Victoria Square on 14 July 1855, and was formally named the Colonial Hospital. In the years since, it has expanded north to Wellington Street. It has been known variously as the Perth Public Hospital, the Perth Hospital and finally, from 1946, as Royal Perth Hospital.

Future

Initial plans in 2005 were to close down operations at RPH in response to the opening of Fiona Stanley Hospital; however, the Western Australian government's South Metropolitan Services have changed plans since. The main campus on Wellington Street will retain its role as a major adult trauma centre and centre for complex surgeries. The Shenton Park campus (a tertiary rehabilitation centre) has closed down and rehabilitation services moved to Fiona Stanley Hospital.

Facilities

Royal Perth Hospital. Visible buildings are Colonial House (left) and South Block behind

Royal Perth Hospital employs over 6000 people and sees over 70,000 patients each year. Some of the services offered are imaging, trauma and neurosciences, a wide variety of surgical options, critical and emergency care, dermatology, internal medicine, and haematology.

As well as providing a comprehensive array of medical services for adults, Royal Perth exists as a teaching hospital, having close associations with Western Australia's four major universities and TAFE institutions. This allows tertiary institutions to provide practical, professional education opportunities and ensures Royal Perth has well-trained and capable staff.

Royal Perth also fosters relationships with WA's other hospitals, including Sir Charles Gairdner Hospital, Fiona Stanley Hospital and Perth Children's Hospital, ensuring all services are available to inpatients, even if RPH doesn't provide them itself.

Research

The head of research at Royal Perth Hospital is Professor Peter Leedman, and RPH is a leading researcher into both patient recovery and improvements in staff practices. RPH shares its campus with several other major research foundations, including the Western Australian Institute for Medical Research, ensuring several research projects are taking place at any one time. The high standing of RPH researchers is demonstrated by their significant contribution to the annals of international scientific literature each year. In 1998, a total of 158 articles and 114 abstracts were published in refereed medical, nursing and scientific journals. In addition, staff presented a total of 190 papers at national and international professional conferences.

Shenton Park

The Royal Perth Rehabilitation Hospital was first established as an isolation tent hospital in the bush at Shenton Park during the outbreak of smallpox in April 1893. This hospital, variously known as the Isolation Hospital, the Victoria Hospital, the Infectious Diseases Branch and finally as the Royal Perth Rehabilitation Hospital, commenced its role as a major rehabilitation hospital with the rehabilitation of polio patients following the epidemic of 1948–56.

Personalities

Several well-known practitioners and medical researchers have worked at Royal Perth Hospital over the years, including Dr Fiona Wood, winner of the 2005 Australian of the Year Award, and Professor Barry Marshall and Dr Robin Warren, winners of the 2005 Nobel Prize in Physiology.

The Royal Perth Hospital motto is "Servio". The hospital logo is based on the arms of the City of Perth and was first introduced in 1935. It comprises the St George's Cross on a white shield with a black swan in the top left canton and a banner inscribed with the word "Servio".

Heritage listing

Various RPH buildings are listed on the State Register of Heritage Places.

References

References

  1. "History". Government of Western Australia, Department of Health.
  2. [http://www.health.wa.gov.au/HRIT/infrastructure/projects/SMAHS.cfm WA Health Infrastructure Development - Projects] www.health.wa.gov.au. Retrieved 2007-02-10.
  3. "South Metropolitan Health Service". Government of Western Australia.
  4. {{Heritage Council of Western Australia
  5. {{Heritage Council of Western Australia
  6. {{Heritage Council of Western Australia
  7. {{Heritage Council of Western Australia
Wikipedia Source

This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.

Want to explore this topic further?

Ask Mako anything about Royal Perth Hospital — get instant answers, deeper analysis, and related topics.

Research with Mako

Free with your Surf account

Content sourced from Wikipedia, available under CC BY-SA 4.0.

This content may have been generated or modified by AI. CloudSurf Software LLC is not responsible for the accuracy, completeness, or reliability of AI-generated content. Always verify important information from primary sources.

Report