Phone +353 61 301 111 | Emergency department Yes, 24 hours Number of beds 562 | |
Similar University Hospital Waterford, St Vincent's University, Letterkenny General Hospital, Connolly Hospital, Midland Regional Hospital |
Neurology stroke ward 3b at university hospital limerick
University Hospital Limerick (formerly known as Limerick Regional Hospital or Mid-Western Regional Hospital, Limerick) is a hospital located in Dooradoyle, Limerick, Ireland. It is managed by the Irish Government's Health Service Executive and provides acute-care hospital services, including a 24-hour emergency department, for the population of Ireland's Mid West Region, encompassing; counties Limerick, Clare, North Tipperary, and South Tipperary. In 2008, the hospital served 120,316 out-patients, and 23,014 in-patients, with an average stay of 5.8 nights. 72.8% of admissions were made via the accident and emergency department or 16,720 patients. In total, 56,528 patients presented to the emergency department in 2008. The hospital saw 20,143-day cases in the same year. In July 2011, it was reported that the hospital would undergo its third name change in five years to become University Hospital Limerick following the establishment of the Graduate Medical School at the University of Limerick which is affiliated to the hospital.
Contents
- Neurology stroke ward 3b at university hospital limerick
- University hospital limerick ice bucket challenge
- Services
- Governance Structure
- Waiting times
- Surgical
- Medical
- Hygiene
- Nenagh hospital downgrading controversy
- References
University hospital limerick ice bucket challenge
Services
The hospital provides 522 beds, of which 375 are in-patient acute beds, while 97 are reserved for acute day cases. A further 50 beds are for psychiatric services. In-patient services include general medicine, general surgery, geriatric assessment, psychiatry, accident and emergency, intensive care/critical care, cardiology, dermatology, gastroenterology, haematology, nephrology, neurology, oncology, palliative medicine, respiratory medicine, rheumatology, dental surgery, gastrointestinal surgery, maxillofacial surgery, ophthalmology, orthopaedics, otorhinolaryngology (ENT), vascular surgery, urology, obstetrics and gynaecology, paediatrics, anaesthesia, radiology, and radiotherapy.
It is the location of the Mid-Western Cancer Centre.
Governance Structure
Since 2012 all six hospitals run by the HSE in the greater Mid-West Region have been operating under a single operating and governance structure known as the University of Limerick Hospitals Group. The hospitals in the group are; University Hospital, Limerick, St. Munchin's Regional Maternity Hospital, Limerick, Mid Western Orthopaedic Hospital, Croom, St John's Hospital, Limerick, Mid Western Regional Hospital, Ennis and the Mid Western Regional Hospital, Nenagh. Previously, each hospital had its own operating and governance structure. It is one of 6 groupings of hospitals in the country. University Hospital Limerick is the main teaching hospital of the group and is aligned with the Graduate Medical School at the University of Limerick.
Waiting times
The national median waiting time for surgery in November 2009 stood at 2.5 months; at Limerick Regional this figure was 2.7 months. Overall waiting time was 2.3 months, just below the national median of 2.4 months. As of November 2009, the National Treatment Purchase Fund listed the following waiting times for procedures:
Surgical
Medical
Hygiene
The health authority has admitted it has a ‘particular problem’ with hospital superbugs in the MidWest.
A multidrug-resistant superbug was associated with 27 deaths in the midwest over a six-year period, the University of Limerick Hospitals Group has confirmed.
Independent audits rated hygiene levels as 65% satisfactory in 2005, rising to 85% in 2006. Hospital-acquired infection affected 5.1% of patients in 2007, with a Methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA) infection rate of 0.14 per 1,000 bed days in 2008.
Nenagh hospital downgrading controversy
In 2009, Government plans to move certain services from Mid-Western Regional Hospital, Nenagh to Mid-Western Regional Hospital, Limerick, were met with protests from healthcare professionals and local residents, including a 4,000-person public demonstration. While there would still be 24-hour access for patients referred by GPs, all surgical emergencies would be dealt with in Limerick. The changes would mean an estimated 10 extra admissions per night at the Limerick emergency department.
However, in June 2014 a new state-of-the-art operating theatre suite was opened to replace the single obsolete operating theatre. It includes two operating theatres, each with an anaesthetic room, prep room, disposal room and scrub room. A six-bed first stage recovery ward with a nurses base, a ten-bed second stage recovery unit (six adult and four paediatric), four bay discharge lounge, and two consultant rooms were also added. Phase 2 of the project, due to be completed in the spring of 2015, will see an additional minor procedures room with further utilities. There are also plans to build a new 18 bed ward block extension. Construction is due to start in mid 2015.