St. Mary's Hospital | |
Coordinates: | 53.35°N -6.3362°W |
Location: | Phoenix, Dublin |
Country: | Ireland |
Beds: | 198 |
Opened: | 1948 |
St Mary's Hospital in the Phoenix Park, Dublin offers stroke rehabilitation to patients of all ages, provides inpatient rehabilitation to older population and provides residential care to older persons. It's a multidisciplinary community hospital. It also provides outpatient services via the Day hospital.
The Royal Hibernian Military School was founded in 1769 as the Hibernian Asylum, by the Hibernian Society, a philanthropic organisation founded in Ireland in 1769 after the Seven Years' War.[1] The Society petitioned the King for a charter on 18 April 1769 and the Hibernian Society was incorporated under Royal Charter on 15 July 1769.[1] [2] The first meeting of the Governors was held on 6 November 1769 in Dublin Castle.[2]
In 1922 the school and boys moved to Shorncliffe and the buildings were handed over to the newly independent Irish Government.[1]
The buildings were used as a hospital by the Irish Army.[3] In 1948 it was transferred to the Dublin Health Authority and turned into a Chest Hospital.[3] In 1964 it became a facility for older patients and provides today accommodation for dependent older people.[3] St Mary’s Hospital undertook a major renovation in late 2020 bringing facilities to that of a modern healthcare facility. St Mary’s Hospital has increased its inpatient capacity from 48 to 101 sub-acute rehabilitation beds providing support to acute hospitals in the region. Phase 2 of the infrastructure upgrade is to include the expansion and modernisation of the hospital's x-Ray department.[4] The Phoenix Park Community Nursing Unit (PPCNU) has 150 beds and provides residential care to older adults.[5]
During the 2020 COVID-19 pandemic patients contracted COVID-19.[6] On 11 April 2020 it was announced by HSE that 11 patients had died in the hospital since 2 April 2020.[6] Ten patients were confirmed as testing positive for COVID-19 and the eleventh was a suspected COVID-19 case that was awaiting confirmation.[6] On 25 April 2020 HSE confirmed that 21 patients had died at the hospital since the start of April.[7] Eleven residents had died between 2 April and 17 April and a further ten had died between 17 April and 25 April.[7] All who died tested positive for COVID-19.[7]