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John Hunter Hospital
Hospital in New South Wales, Australia From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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The John Hunter Hospital and John Hunter Children's Hospital (sometimes known as the JHH and JHCH respectively), is a teaching hospital and children's hospital in Newcastle, and northern New South Wales, Australia. The 820 bed hospital is the main teaching hospital of the University of Newcastle. The hospital contains the only trauma centre in New South Wales outside the Sydney Metropolitan Area, and has the busiest emergency department in the state.[1] John Hunter is the busiest trauma hospital in the country.[citation needed]
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Overview
The John Hunter health complex consists of 820 beds in total, and is co-located next to the 174 bed Newcastle Private Hospital, as well as the regional Hunter Area Pathology Service which provides tertiary level pathology testing. The complex consists of a single building, which is divided into 694 adult beds and another 126 paediatric beds in the John Hunter Children's Hospital.
The Royal Newcastle Centre (formerly Royal Newcastle Hospital), opened as an extension wing to the John Hunter Hospital in April 2006, providing 144 of these beds. Patients from the Hunter Region and beyond are referred to John Hunter for treatment in a range of specialities. The John Hunter Children's Hospital and Royal Newcastle Centre are located within the same building as the John Hunter Hospital. Also on the same grounds are Rankin Park Hospital (Rehab), Newcastle Private Hospital and the Hunter Medical Research Institute (HMRI).
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Specialty services provided
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The JHH and JHCH are tertiary level hospitals, and provide the following specialties and subspecialties:
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Wards
The John Hunter Hospital and John Hunter Children's Hospital consists of the following ~30 bed wards. Wards are designated by their horizontal position along the hospitals long corridor (by letter) and the number indicates which level of the hospital the ward is on (Levels 1–3). Hence ward E3 is positioned above E2 and next door to ward F3.
- Ward E1: General Medicine
- Ward E2: Urology/Rheumatology
- Ward E3: Orthopaedics
- Ward F1: Orthopaedics
- Ward F2: Immunology/Respiratory/General Medicine
- Ward F3: Cardiovascular
- Ward G1: Trauma/Special Surgery
- Ward G2: Neurology/Neurosurgery
- Ward G3: Cardiology/Gastroenterology
- Ward H1: Children's Medical
- Ward H3: Emergency Short Stay (ESSU) + Medical Acute Care Unit (MACU)
- Ward J1: Children's Surgical and Oncology
- Ward J2: Adolescent, Day Stay and Sleep Unit
- Ward J3: General Surgery
- Ward K1: Nephrology/Dialysis
- Ward K2: Maternity/Post-Natal
- Ward K3: Gynaecology/Gynaecology Oncology
- AGSU: Acute General Surgical Unit
- CCU: Coronary Care Unit
- ED: Emergency Department
- Transplant: Transplant
- ICU/HD: Intensive Care Unit/High Dependency Unit
- PICU: Paediatric Intensive Care Unit
- NICU: Neonatal Intensive Care Unit
- NEXUS: Adolescent Mental Health
Origin of name
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While a full page advertisement taken out by the John Hunter Hospital in the Newcastle Herald on 30 January 1991 references three notable John Hunters, the advertisement only explicitly references that the hospital was named after the former Governor, and although the advertisement states "Here's to the Governor who forged a nation, here's to the John Hunters who achieved so much in medical science, and here's to our John Hunter Hospital", the advertisement only explicitly references the former Governor of New South Wales as the namesake of the hospital, stating "...[S]everal dedicated and visionary people made enormous contributions toward building a nation that would one day stand as an example to the rest of the world. One such man was Governor John Hunter. Our Valley is named in his honour. So, too, is the State's newest and most modern hospital, the John Hunter Hospital at New Lambton Heights."[2]
The three John Hunters referenced in the advertisement are:
- John Hunter, a former governor of New South Wales and the namesake of the whole Hunter region
- John Hunter, the famed 18th-century surgeon and pioneer of anatomical pathology, and
- John Irvine Hunter, an Australian anatomist who died in 1924 at the age of 26, having already been appointed the youngest anatomy professor at the University of Sydney
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Solar array
In late 2021, a solar installation said to be the largest on any hospital in the world, was switched on at the John Hunter Hospital. It contains more than 5,000 solar panels, covers 12,000 square metres, and generates 3.24 gigawatt-hours per year.[3]
Controversies
"Clinical Marshmallow" Incident
In January 2025, a hospital administrator accidentally sent an email to all junior doctors employed at the hospital calling them a "workforce of clinical marshmellows [sic]", after doctors questioned the decision to roster them for 10 night shifts in a row.[4]
This prompted a large public response, including a public apology from senior hospital executive staff and a response from Australian Salaried Medical Officers' Federation[5]
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References
External links
Wikiwand - on
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