Royal Children's Hospital, Brisbane Explained

Royal Children's Hospital, Brisbane
Coordinates:-27.4492°N 153.0255°W
Location:Herston, Brisbane, Queensland
State:Queensland
Country:Australia
Healthcare:Public
Type:Specialist
Speciality:Paediatrics
Opened:1878
Closed:2014
Demolished:2017

The Royal Children's Hospital (RCH) was a hospital for children in Herston, Brisbane, Australia. RCH was located next to the Royal Brisbane and Women's Hospital before it was demolished and the land was used to build the Surgical, Treatment and Rehabilitation Service (STARS).

History

Mary McConnel, a mother of six and grandmother, grew concerned at the lack of primary care for children in Brisbane. Inspired by the Royal Hospital for Sick Children in her home town of Edinburgh and London's Great Ormond Street Hospital, she endeavoured over fifteen years to raise money to found a children's hospital in the Brisbane.[1]

on 11th March 1878, the Hospital for Sick Children opened in rented premises in Leichhardt Street Spring Hill, on the site of the present St Paul's Presbyterian Church. McConnel hired a nurse and matron from England to run the hospital, while local women were trained. The hospital quickly outgrew its 15-bed premises, and was moved to a larger building in Herston on land provided by the Queensland Government.

The hospital's name was changed from the Hospital for Sick Children to the Brisbane Children's Hospital on 21 October, 1943. [2] Its name was changed again in 1967 to Royal Children's Hospital.[3]

In 2009, a decision was made to merge the Royal Children's Hospital with Mater Children's Hospital in Stanley Street, South Brisbane to create a single children's hospital in Brisbane. The decision was very controversial with many people opposed to the merger, while others supported the merge but argued over location of the new hospital (some favouring the Herston site and other favouring the South Brisbane site).[4]

The Queensland Children's Hospital opened on 29 November 2014, adjacent to the Mater Misericordiae Hospital, in South Brisbane, with the Royal Children's Hospital and the Mater Children's Hospital closing immediately as their patients were transferred to the Queensland Children's Hospital.[5]

In November 2016, the Queensland State Government announced the creation of the Herston Quarter Priority Development Area[6] to restore and redevelop the hospital site.[7] The hospital was demolished in 2017.[8]

Notable personnel

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Mary McConnel (1824 –1910). Great Queensland Women. Queensland Government. 3 November 2017.
  2. Book: Fison, D.C. . The History of Royal Children's Hospital Brisbane . 1970 . Sn . Brisbane . 23.
  3. Web site: Royal Children's Hospital (Brisbane, Qld.). 2008. Trove. 8 November 2017.
  4. News: Bligh confirms merged children's hospitals will go ahead. 11 February 2009. ABC News. 8 November 2017. https://web.archive.org/web/20171108045951/http://www.abc.net.au/news/2009-02-11/bligh-confirms-merged-childrens-hospitals-will-go/292120. 8 November 2017. live. Australian Broadcasting Corporation.
  5. News: Lady Cilento Hospital opens at South Brisbane. Atfield. Cameron. 30 November 2014. Brisbane Times. 8 November 2017. https://web.archive.org/web/20171108050049/https://www.brisbanetimes.com.au/national/queensland/lady-cilento-hospital-opens-at-south-brisbane-20141129-11wsoe.html. 8 November 2017. live.
  6. https://www.dilgp.qld.gov.au/planning/priority-development-areas/herston-quarter.html QLD State Government DILGP: Herston Quarter PDA
  7. http://statements.qld.gov.au/Statement/2014/8/1/restoration-and-redevelopment-for-historic-herston-hospital-site QLD State Government Statement: Restoration and Redevelopment for historic Herston hospital site
  8. Web site: Metro North . 2017. Work begins on the $1.1 billion Herston Quarter Redevelopment . Queensland Health.
  9. Book: Royal Children's Hospital Foundation . Annual Report . 2006 . Royal Children's Hospital Foundation . Brisbane.
  10. Web site: Cystic Fibrosis Service . 18 October 2018 . The State of Queensland (Children's Health Queensland) . 23 November 2018.