Yahoo Search Búsqueda en la Web

Resultado de búsqueda

  1. Radcliffe Infirmary. occupation: Hospital. Nationality: English; British. born in: Oxford, Oxfordshire, England, United Kingdom. 1758 - first proposals to build a hospital for Oxford were made at a meeting of the Radcliffe Trustees. 1770 - the Bishop of Oxford consecrated the Radcliffe Infirmary's burial ground (long since buried itself), and ...

  2. Famed for leading the world in many fields of medical discoveries and innovations, the Radcliffe Infirmary was the birthplace for numerous breakthroughs in medicine and treatments, the most significant and widely used now being the use of penicillin, which was first tested on a patient in 1941 - the same year in which the Radcliffe opened the first accident service in Britain.

  3. 27 de feb. de 2012 · The Radcliffe Infirmary closed in late 2007, with most services moving to the John Radcliffe Hospital. The site is being transformed into a new £500m university quarter, with a maths institute ...

  4. 22 de dic. de 2006 · Reunion: Nurses who trained at the Radcliffe Infirmary In a few weeks' time the closure of Oxford's Radcliffe Infirmary will bring to an end more than 200 years of service to the community.

  5. It was named Arthur Sanctuary House, in honour of the man who had been administrator of the Radcliffe Infirmary, 1921 - 1951. In 1960 the Manor House site was chosen for the new hospital, and a planning team was appointed in 1963. Work began on Phase I, a new maternity hospital, in 1968. This building is now the John Radcliffe Hospital's Women ...

  6. John Radcliffe Hospital, Oxford. In 1919 the Radcliffe Infirmary purchased the Manor House estate in Headington. The Infirmary site was already overcrowded and they had been asked to provide sanatorium accommodation for tuberculosis. They had applied to the Radcliffe Trustees for the use of some of the Observatory land, but without success.

  7. The Radcliffe Infirmary is but a city and county affair, inadequately supported by the villadom of North Oxford and by a county suffering profoundly from agricultural depression, and unable to provide funds. Uur criticism and our advice regarding the management and status of tbe Radcliffe Infirmary have drawn forth the somewhat weak reply that the infirmary is not a University institution ...