The following is a List of hospitals in Russia. The list includes links to notable hospital articles.
There were 5,300 hospitals in Russia in 2018.[1] The earliest Russian hospitals were established in the 18th century. The hospitals listed in the table below are some of the notable hospitals in Russia during its history. The table includes the name, city in which the hospital is located, year the hospital was established, pertinent comments and references. Many hospitals have more complete articles in the Russian Wikipedia.
Name | Location | Year Established | Comments, Reference | |
---|---|---|---|---|
St. Petersburg | 1842 | After Alexander II of Russia[2] | ||
Anglo-Russian Hospital | Petrograd | 19151918 | [3] | |
(formerly Soldatyonkov Hospital) | Moscow | 1910 | After Sergey Botkin[4] | |
Bakhrushin Brothers Hospital | Moscow | 1887 | ||
Central Clinical Hospital | Moscow | 1957 | [5] | |
Central Clinical Hospital of the Moscow Patriarchate | Moscow | 1903 | founded by the Russian Orthodox Church[6] | |
Children's Hospital of St. Mary Magdalene | St. Petersburg | 1829 | [7] | |
City Clinical Hospital No. 4 (formerly Pavlovskaya Hospital) | Moscow | 1763 | [8] | |
City Clinical Hospital No. 23 | Moscow | 1866 | [9] | |
City Clinical Hospital No. 63 | Moscow | |||
City Clinical Hospital No. 67 (named after L. A. Vorokhobov) | Moscow | 1959 | [10] | |
City hospital No. 40 | St. Petersburg | 1740 | [11] | |
Evangelical Hospital | Moscow | 1880 | [12] | |
Federal Center of Neurosurgery | Tyumen | 2011 | [13] | |
Golitsyn Hospital | Moscow | 1802 | [14] | |
Lesnoye Sanatorium | Tolyatti | 1910 | [15] | |
Burdenko Main Military Clinical Hospital (named after N.N.Burdenko) | Moscow | 1706 | first state medical institution in Russia[16] | |
Mariinskaya Hospital | St. Petersburg | 1803 | [17] | |
Moscow Eye Hospital | Moscow | 1826 | one of the oldest eye hospitals in the world (associated with the Helmholtz National Medical Research Center for Eye Diseases)[18] | |
N.A. Semashko City Hospital No. 1 | Rostov-on-Don | 1922 | [19] | |
Novosibirsk Psychiatric Hospital No. 3 | Novosibirsk | 1929 | [20] | |
Psychiatric Clinical Hospital No. 1, named after N. A. Alekseev | Moscow | 1894 | [21] | |
Russian Ilizarov Scientific Center for Restorative Traumatology and Orthopaedics | Kurgan | 1971 | [22] | |
Serbsky Center | Moscow | 1921 | [23] | |
Saint Petersburg Children's Hospice | Saint Petersburg | 2003 | [24] | |
St Petersburg Psychiatric Hospital of Specialized Type with Intense Observation | St. Petersburg | 1951 | [25] | |
Sklifosovsky Research Institute of Emergency Medicine | Moscow | 1810 | [26] | |
State Autonomous Healthcare Institution of the Yaroslavl Region | Yaroslavl | 1781 | [27] | |
Yeleninskaya Hospital | St. Petersburg | 1909 | [28] |