Thunder Bay Regional Health Sciences Centre | |
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North West Local Health Integration Network | |
Panorama of the hospital from the southeast
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Geography | |
Location | 980 Oliver Road, Thunder Bay, Ontario, Canada |
Coordinates | 48°25′28″N 89°16′08″W / 48.424444°N 89.268889°WCoordinates: 48°25′28″N 89°16′08″W / 48.424444°N 89.268889°W |
Organization | |
Care system | Public Medicare (Canada) (OHIP) |
Hospital type | General / Teaching (Group A ) |
Services | |
Emergency department | Yes |
Helipad | TC LID: CTB2 |
Beds | 395 |
History | |
Founded | 2004 |
Links | |
Website | http://www.tbrhsc.net/ |
Lists | Hospitals in Canada |
Thunder Bay Regional Health Sciences Centre is an acute care facility serving Thunder Bay and much of Northwestern Ontario, Canada. The hospital has 395 acute care beds. All of its patient rooms are handicapped accessible and the facility is air-conditioned with "negative pressure" rooms to accommodate those who may be suffering from communicable diseases. The TBRHSC is a leader in providing cancer care. The hospital is supported by the Thunder Bay Regional Health Sciences Foundation.
Thunder Bay Regional Health Sciences Centre's emergency room is one of the busiest in Canada, receiving over 106,000 annual visits.
Thunder Bay Regional Health Sciences Centre was created in 2004 as an amalgamation of the Port Arthur and McKellar branches of the Thunder Bay Regional Hospital system. Patients from both hospitals were relocated on February 22 and 23, 2004, at which time the name was changed to Thunder Bay Regional Health Sciences Centre.
Thunder Bay Regional Health Sciences Centre operates two Linear accelerators, and offers training to new doctors on how to operate them. The centre's critical care unit, operating rooms and emergency department trauma rooms feature articulating arms, which allows physicians and caregivers to operate with greater ease. The centre has both hard-wired and wireless technology, allowing its diagnostic imaging to use a picture archival system to record images from magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), CT Scanners and other diagnostic imaging equipment which permits easier access to files among specialists so they may view and assess images as quickly as possible, and in any location necessary.