Tallaght University Hospital | |
Org/Group: | Health Service Executive |
Location: | Tallaght |
Region: | Dublin |
Country: | Ireland |
Healthcare: | HSE |
Type: | Teaching |
Emergency: | Yes |
Affiliation: | Trinity College Dublin |
Beds: | 562 |
Founded: | 1998 |
Map Type: | Ireland Dublin |
The Tallaght University Hospital (Irish: Ospidéal Ollscoile Thamhlachta) is a teaching hospital in County Dublin, Ireland. Its academic partner is the Trinity College Dublin. It is managed by Dublin Midlands Hospital Group.[1]
The hospital, which was designed by Robinson Keefe Devane,[2] was intended to provide the newly developed Dublin suburb of Tallaght with its own general hospital, by relocating services from three smaller sites in Dublin's city centre: the Adelaide Hospital, the Meath Hospital and the National Children's Hospital.[3] A board of directors was established by the Minister for Health in 1980.[4] It was built at a cost of £140 million[5] and opened as the Adelaide and Meath Hospital, Dublin, incorporating the National Children's Hospital (AMNCH) on 21 June 1998.[3]
In March 2010, an investigation was launched when it emerged that 58,000 X-rays had not been reviewed by a consultant radiologist.[6] In November 2011, Minister for Health James Reilly announced "radical governance reforms" for the hospital including a slimmed down board composed of experts.[7] It changed its name to the Tallaght Hospital in February 2012[8] and to the Tallaght University Hospital in March 2018.[9]
The Children's Services Department changed its name to Children's Health Ireland at Tallaght as part of the rebranding of three hospitals under the Children's Health Ireland banner on 1 January 2019.[10]
The hospital, which is a teaching hospital for Trinity College Dublin, has 562 beds.[11]
In November 2021 the hospital installed an Integrated Clinical Environment, the first in Ireland, with order communications, results reporting and an electronic patient record provided by CliniSys.[12]