Midland Regional Hospital, Mullingar

Midland Regional Hospital, Mullingar
Health Service Executive

A view of the Midland Regional Hospital which is located in the west of the town
The location of the hospital within County Westmeath
Geography
Location Mullingar, County Westmeath, Ireland
Coordinates Coordinates: 53°32′03″N 7°20′56″W / 53.534185°N 7.348961°W / 53.534185; -7.348961
Organisation
Care system HSE
Hospital type Regional
Services
Emergency department Yes Accident & Emergency
Beds 204 (2014) [1]
History
Founded 1986
Links
Lists Hospitals in the Republic of Ireland

Midland Regional Hospital, Mullingar (formerly known as Longford-Westmeath Regional Hospital)[2] is a public[3] hospital located in Mullingar, County Westmeath, Ireland. It is managed by the Irish Government's Health Service Executive and provides acute-care hospital services, including a 24-hour emergency department,[3] for the population of County Westmeath and the Irish Midlands. In 2008, the hospital served 70,454 out-patients, and 18,951 in-patients, with an average stay of 3.0 nights.[3] 69.0% of admissions were made via the accident and emergency department or 12,114 patients. In 2007, 35,767 patients presented to the emergency department. The hospital saw 6,851 day cases in the same year.[3] A large extension was built in the early 1990s to accommodate the ever-increasing population of the town. A change in government halted investment and the extension lay as an empty shell until late 2006 when funding was finally secured to ensure its completion.

Services

The hospital provides 211 beds, of which 197 are in-patient acute beds, while 14 are reserved for acute day cases.[3] In-patient services include general medicine, general surgery, accident and emergency, oncology, cardiology, orthopaedics, obstetrics and gynaecology, haematology, paediatrics, anaesthesia, radiology.[3]

Waiting times

The national median waiting time for surgery in November 2009 stood at 2.5 months; at Mullingar Regional this figure was 2.6 months. Overall waiting time was 2.2 months, below the national median of 2.4 months.[4] As of November 2009,[4] the National Treatment Purchase Fund listed the following waiting times for procedures:

Surgical

Medical

Hygiene

Independent audits rated hygiene levels as 63% satisfactory in 2005,[5] rising to 94% in 2006.[6] Hospital-acquired infection affected 2.9% of patients in 2007, with a Methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA) infection rate of 0.09 per 1,000 bed days in 2007.[3]

Specialities

See also

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 3/1/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.