Regional hospital

A regional hospital, also referred to as a district hospital in some parts of the world is a hospital that serves a geographic region larger area than a single local or rural area. Some countries also define specific services that required in regional hospitals. The word regional or district may also be part of the name of the hospital. Regional hospitals sometimes serve specific needs that cannot be adequately met by a local or rural hospital,[1] such as treating rare cancers, providing 24 hour emergency services, treating rare diseases such as ebola[2] or rare conditions such as obstetric fistula,[3] or providing elective orthopedic surgery.[4]

Country variations

Medicine Hat Regional Hospital, Medicine Hat, Canada
Wellington Hospital, regional hospital in Wellington, New Zealand
Bartlett Regional Hospital in Juneau, Alaska, U.S.
Chaophraya Abhaibhubejhr Hospital (Regional hospital in Prachinburi Province, Thailand

In the National Health Service of the United Kingdom, a regional hospital is one that provides more complex services than a district hospital, such as transplantations or rare cancers.[5]

The World Health Organization defines a regional hospital or provincial hospital as a secondary level hospital providing 5 to 10 clinical specialties and with 200 to 800 hospital beds. It is different than a smaller primary-level hospital and larger tertiary-level hospital.[6]

In South Africa, a regional hospitals must provide the following services on a 24 hour basis:

  • health services in the fields of internal medicine, paediatrics, obstetrics and gynaecology, and general surgery;
  • health services in at least one of the following specialties—
    • orthopaedic surgery;
    • psychiatry;
    • anaesthetics;
    • diagnostic radiology;
    • trauma and emergency services;
  • short-term ventilation in a critical care unit;
  • services to a defined regional drainage population, limited to provincial boundaries and receives referrals from several district hospitals; and
  • where practical, provide training for health care service providers.

In additiona, A regional hospital receives outreach and support from tertiary hospitals has between 200 and 800 beds.[7]

See also

References

  1. "Rethinking Rural Hospitals With Lessons From The Battlefield". Forbes. 22 January 2015. What if rural facilities were used for the kind of routine care and simple procedures that generalist physicians and nurses can safely provide while designating regional hospitals for more complex, specialty care?
  2. "Experts: Regional hospitals can best treat Ebola". USA Today. 16 October 2014.
  3. "Regional Hospitals". Hamlin Fistula USA.
  4. "Surgical Edge Goes to Regional Hospitals". UPI. 21 February 2011.
  5. "Regional Hospital Sevvice". The Free Dictionary. Retrieved December 21, 2020.
  6. "Table: Definitions and Terms for Different Levels of Hospital" (PDF). WHO. Retrieved December 21, 2020.
  7. "South Africa: Consolidated Regulations". SAFLII. Retrieved December 21, 2020.


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