Southampton General Hospital Explained

Southampton General Hospital
Org/Group:University Hospital Southampton NHS Foundation Trust
Map Type:Hampshire
Coordinates:50.933°N -1.434°W
Location:Southampton, Hampshire, England
Healthcare:National Health Service
Type:Teaching
Emergency:Yes (Major Trauma Centre)
Affiliation:University of Southampton School of Medicine
Beds:1,362
Founded:1900

Southampton General Hospital (SGH) is a large teaching hospital in Southampton, Hampshire, England run by University Hospital Southampton NHS Foundation Trust.

History

The hospital was founded in 1900 as the Southampton Union Infirmary in Shirley Warren, Southampton, to replace hospital beds previously provided at the workhouse infirmary in St Mary's, Southampton. The Royal South Hampshire Hospital was the voluntary hospital, founded in 1835 in the city.[1] The initial 35acres site cost the Poor Law Guardians £8,200, and the foundation stone was laid on 31 March 1900. The original building, housing 289 beds, cost £64,800 to construct; it has since been demolished.

Southampton Borough Council took responsibility for the hospital in 1929, expanding the number of beds to 431. At this stage, the hospital became known as the Borough Hospital. When the National Health Service came into being in 1948, the hospital took its present name.

The Wessex Neurological Unit opened on the site in 1965, and the East Wing was constructed in 1974, providing 450 additional beds, a new Accident and Emergency Department, and a children's unit. Three years later, the Centre Block was built, which still provides the main entrance to the hospital. The 7-level Centre Block cost over £9 million to construct.

Former Prime Minister, Rishi Sunak, was born in the hospital on 12 May 1980.[2]

In 1983, the £10 million West Wing was constructed, adding 472 beds to the hospital; this was followed a year later by installation of the Wessex Body Scanner at a cost of £1.5 million.

In July 2006, a new cardiac centre was opened, together with accommodation for relatives of cardiac patients.[3] In September 2006 the Steve Mills Stem Cell Laboratory, which had been established by a charity created by Southampton F.C. footballer Steve Mills, moved from the Royal South Hants Hospital to a new location at Southampton General Hospital, and was officially opened on 27 September 2006 by Steve's widow Jo and former Southampton footballer and manager, Alan Ball.[4]

In autumn 2016 the hospital was upgraded to become an adult and paediatric Major Trauma Centre (MTC) under the NHS plans for Regional Trauma Networks.[5] It was one of a small number of accident and emergency departments to benefit from Pearson Lloyd's redesign - ‘A Better A&E’ - which reduced aggression against hospital staff by 50 per cent. A system of environmental signage was introduced providing location-specific information for patients. Screens were installed providing live information about how many cases were being handled and the current status of the accident and emergency department.[6]

Controversy

Ashya King

See main article: Ashya King case. In August 2014, Brett and Naghemeh King took their 5-year-old son Ashya from the hospital, where he was being treated for medulloblastoma, without doctor's knowledge.[7] Brett King claimed this was in order to avoid the proposed treatment of chemotherapy and photon beam radiation therapy which he feared would result in brain damage to Ashya.[8] The family's preferred treatment was proton beam therapy which was at the time unavailable in the United Kingdom except through an NHS overseas referral programme to fund treatment in America or Europe for specific indications.[9] Although clinicians at Southampton felt proton beam therapy would not be beneficial in this case, it was discussed with the Kings and referred to the Proton Clinical Reference Panel although medulloblastoma is not an approved diagnosis to qualify for the overseas programme.[10]

The Kings were keen to arrange proton beam therapy at a hospital in Prague. When the parents asked what would happen if they refused any kind of treatment, they were told the hospital could seek an emergency protection order.[11] When the child subsequently went missing the hospital informed the police and the CPS issued a warrant for the arrest of the parents. Once it was revealed that the child had left the country, extradition back to the UK was also sought. The family were eventually located in Spain, where the parents were arrested and child put in a high dependency ward in a hospital in Málaga.[12] David Cameron, the prime minister, called for "an urgent outbreak of common sense".[13]

Ashya began proton beam therapy at the Proton Therapy Centre in Prague on 15 September.[14] In late September NHS England agreed to fund the cost of the proton therapy treatment.[15] NHS England had been told by the European Court of Justice to fund treatment abroad in previous cases.[16] In March 2015 the King family announced that the treatment appeared to have been successful and Ashya's most recent scan showed no sign of the tumour.[17]

Burger King

There had been a Burger King outlet in the foyer of the hospital since 1997. In November 2014 the Trust announced that they would not be renewing its lease due to expire in 2016 - because it no longer fits with the "healthcare environment" it is trying to create in its main reception area.[18] Hampshire GP Dr Hilary Jones approved and said that in the grip of an obesity problem in the UK, hospitals should be setting a good example to patients. However some patients started a petition against this decision on the basis that hospital food was "of a poor standard. Burger King seems to have a much higher quality of food that's cooked fresh and to order."[19]

A hospital spokesman responded: "The trust, as with all NHS hospitals, is regularly assessed by a variety of independent bodies on all aspects of care, including the quality of patient food. In the most recent of these inspections, the trust scored highly on food quality (92%) according to panel members from the national patient-led assessment team and fully compliant with all of the Care Quality Commission's essential standards, which incorporate quality of food and drink."[20] The fast food outlet was replaced by a Marks & Spencer shop and cafe and a Subway franchise as part of a £2.5m redevelopment which began in mid-2015.[21] [22]

Media coverage

The hospital was the location for the daytime TV fly-on-the-wall documentary series, The General and the ITV documentary series Trauma: Level One.[23] The neighbouring Princess Anne Hospital was the setting of the first two series of Channel 4's One Born Every Minute.[24]

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. Brown, Jim. The Illustrated History of Southampton's Suburbs. Breedon. .
  2. Web site: Rishi Sunak's Southampton childhood described in Lord Ashcroft biography Daily Echo . 26 October 2022 . www.dailyecho.co.uk.
  3. Web site: Annual Report 2005/2006. 7. Southampton University Hospitals NHS Trust. 17 September 2018.
  4. Web site: This one’s for you, Steve. 28 September 2006. Daily Echo. 17 September 2018.
  5. http://www.nhs.uk/NHSEngland/AboutNHSservices/Emergencyandurgentcareservices/Documents/2016/MTS-map.pdf "Major Trauma Centres in England"
  6. News: A&E department redesign ‘cuts aggression by half’. 13 December 2013. Design Week. 28 November 2013.
  7. News: Ashya King: Southampton hospital staff 'receive abuse'. 11 September 2014. 16 September 2014. BBC News.
  8. News: Ashya King: Hospital wanted to kill our son, turn him into a vegetable, claims father. https://web.archive.org/web/20140903224905/http://www.telegraph.co.uk/health/11072116/Ashya-King-Hospital-wanted-to-kill-our-son-turn-him-into-a-vegetable-claims-father.html. dead. 3 September 2014. The Daily Telegraph. London. Keith . Perry. Nicola . Harley. Edward . Malnick. 3 September 2014. 1 April 2015.
  9. Web site: NSCT Proton Overseas Programme. The Royal College of Radiologists. 16 September 2014.
  10. Portsmouth City Council v King et al. High Court of Justice. 8 September 2014. http://www.judiciary.gov.uk/wp-content/uploads/2014/09/judgment-ashya-king-08092014.pdf.
  11. News: Ashya King: Hospital denies blocking proton beam treatment. BBC News. 3 September 2014. 1 April 2015.
  12. News: Ashya King's parents fight extradition from Spain. BBC News. 1 September 2014. 1 April 2015.
  13. News: David Cameron calls for 'common sense' as Ashya King's parents plan to sue. London Evening Standard. London. Benedict. Moore-Bridger. 2 September 2014. 1 April 2015.
  14. News: Ashya King: Prague proton beam therapy begins. 16 September 2014. BBC News. 15 September 2014.
  15. News: Ashya King U-turn: Brain tumour patient's pioneering treatment WILL be funded by NHS. 26 September 2014. Daily Mirror. London. 26 September 2014. Andrew. Gregory.
  16. Web site: NHS told to fund treatment abroad. BBC News. 16 May 2006. 1 April 2015.
  17. News: Ashya King’s parents say he is cancer-free after proton therapy. Caroline. Davies. 23 March 2015. The Guardian. London. 1 April 2015.
  18. News: Hospital chiefs reveal fast food chain’s lease will not be renewed. 22 November 2014. Sian. Davies. Southern Daily Echo. Southampton. 1 April 2015.
  19. News: Petition is launched to save Burger King in Southampton General Hospital from closing. 24 November 2014. Southern Daily Echo. Southampton. 24 November 2014.
  20. News: Southampton General Hospital bosses have defended the food its contractors Medirest provide after it was criticised by locals. 7 December 2014. Joe. Curtis. Southern Daily Echo. Southampton. 1 April 2015.
  21. News: Marks & Spencer and Subway will be part of Southampton General Hospital after a £2.5million redevelopment. 1 April 2015. Joe. Curtis. Southern Daily Echo. Southampton. 1 April 2015.
  22. News: Southampton General Hospital reveals Burger King replacements. 1 April 2015. BBC News. 2 April 2015.
  23. Web site: Trauma: Level One Episode 1. itv.com. 21 January 2015.
  24. Web site: One Born Every Minute: About the Show. Channel 4. 21 January 2015.