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Maidstone hospital

Maidstone Hospital
Maidstone and Tunbridge Wells NHS Trust
Maidstone Hospital.JPG
Maidstone Hospital
Geography
Location Barming, Maidstone, Kent, England, United Kingdom
Coordinates 51°16′26″N 0°29′00″E / 51.274°N 0.4832°E / 51.274; 0.4832Coordinates: 51°16′26″N 0°29′00″E / 51.274°N 0.4832°E / 51.274; 0.4832
Organisation
Care system Public NHS
Funding Public hospital
Hospital type District General
Services
Emergency department Yes Accident & Emergency
Helipad Yes
Links
Website http://www.mtw.nhs.uk/your-visit/maidstone2.asp
Lists Hospitals in England

Maidstone Hospital (officially known as Maidstone District General Hospital) is a hospital in Barming, Maidstone, England. It is managed by the Maidstone and Tunbridge Wells NHS Trust.

The hospital opened in 1983 on a greenfield site adjacent to the now defunct Oakwood Hospital with the intention of replacing the general and accident and emergency services of the ageing West Kent hospital in Marsham Street Maidstone. The development includes a landing pad for the Kent Air Ambulance.

Extra wings have been added since the hospital opened, including a self-contained orthopaedic unit and new Eye, Ear and Mouth Unit in 2003 (replacing the Ear, Nose and Throat clinic that was based at Maidstone Ophthalmic Hospital (now closed) in Maidstone town centre) and the Peggy Wood Breast Care Centre in 2004.

The Kent Oncology Centre is partly housed on this site. The specialist centre provides cancer services for the whole of Kent and also Hastings and Rother. The hospital also has a £2m Emergency Care Centre, which was one of the first of its kind in the country to offer full A&E services, a GP out-of-hours service and a walk-in centre under one roof.

The hospital has appeared in the nationally recognised 40 Top Hospitals programme for four years running for its high standards of clinical care.

In 2007, the local NHS trust and Maidstone Hospital were involved in a scandal when 90 patients at the hospital may have died as a direct result of contracting the superbug c-diff in an outbreak that began in 2006. A subsequent investigation found these infections to be the result of dirty and overcrowded conditions at the hospital.

The report also revealed that the outbreak contributed to a further 240 deaths, although the report does not note if this would have changed the outcome for these patients. More than 1,150 people were ultimately infected.


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