Hospital for Tropical Diseases

Name :

Hospital for Tropical Diseases

Address  :

Mortimer Market
Capper Street
off Tottenham Court Road
Bloomsbury

Town  :

London

State  :

Greater London

Country  :

UK

Post Code:

WC1E 6JB

Phone  :

020 7387 4411

Fax  :

020 7388 7645

Web URL  :


Description

Welcome to the Hospital for Tropical Diseases
The Hospital for Tropical Diseases HTD is the only National Health Service NHS Hospital dedicated to the prevention diagnosis and treatment of tropical diseases and travel related infections The Hospital serves those who are preparing to travel together with long and short term returned travellers immigrants and refugee populations It also provides the clinical infectious disease service for UCL Hospitals NHS Trust and has a purpose built 43 bed tropical and infectious disease unit


History

History
On the 8th March 1821 the first meeting of the committee of management of the Seamans Hospital Society took place at the quotCity of London Tavernquot where it was agreed to establish by public voluntary subscription a floating hospital for the relief of sick and helpless seamen under the patronage of His Majesty the King King George IV This date has become known as quotFounders Dayquot the birth of Tropical Medicine

The first Hospital was established onboard the ex navel ship HMS Grampus After moving ships twice other ex navel warships 18211831 HMS Grampus 18311857 HMS Dreadnought 18571870 HMS Caledonia renamed Dreadnought the Hospital gained its land legs when it moved into part of Royal Greenwich Hospital in 1870 this became known as the Dreadnought Hospital named after its last floating home

The Lancet May 1919 quotA Hospital dedicated to the treatment of patients suffering from Tropical Diseases will be opened shortly by the Seamans Hospital Society in the Endsleigh Palace Hotel near Euston Squarequot The Endsleigh Palace Hotel 25 Gordon Street was at the time being used by the Red Cross as a hospital

25 Gordon Street was evacuated at the start of the 2nd World War and the HTD was temporarily relocated back at the Dreadnought Hospital in Greenwich where it remained throughout the war years Gordon Street was subsequently damaged during the blitz of London and at end of hostilities the HTD moved into another temporary home at 23 Devonshire Street

quotThe Hospital for Tropical Diseases London This hospital which was closed during the war has now reopened at 23 Devonshire Street The Hospital is open to all patients suffering from tropical Diseasesquot The Lancet 411947
In 1948 on being asked what his plans were for tropical diseases in London the then Secretary of State for Health Aneurin Bevan stated quotIt is proposed to develop a tropical diseases centre as a unit of the University College of London Hospital group The Colonial Secretary and I are most anxious to ensure that the development shall be worthy of the object in viewquot After much discussion the decision was eventually made in 1949 by University College to offer the vacant St Pancras Hospital as the site for the new hospital

The Hospital moved in to its new home in 1951 which was officially on the opened by the Duchess of Kent on the 24th May Empire Day The opening of the new hospital which was now part of the newly establish National Health Service effectively ended the 130 year association with the Seamans Hospital Society

The Dean of the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine expressed the hope quotthat the new Hospital would put London once again in the forefront as a teaching and research centre in tropical medicinequot BMJ 1949

A contributor to the Lancet in 1949 wrote quotThe new Hospital should be planned on a broad lines and should have enough beds to provide ample material in clinical instruction in Tropical Medicine bearing in mind likely future developments in this rapidly expanding field of medicinequot

The newly refurbished St Pancras hospital was home to HTD from 1951 until 1998 its longest stay at any site in its long history when the hospital once again moved in to new purpose built premises within UCLH The speciality of Tropical Medicine remains in the twenty first century an expanding field of medicine as it did in 1821 when the first Hospital for Tropical Diseases was established on board HMS Grampus

The new Hospital for Tropical Diseases was opened on the 29th June 1999 by Her Royal Highness The Princess Royal thus maintaining the Hospitals long tradition of Royal Patronage The new Hospital remains the only dedicated hospital of its kind within the NHS providing specialist clinical treatment and diagnostic services to those with tropical and travel related diseases
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