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Calcutta: A hospital with a history

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  • Calcutta: A hospital with a history

    Calcutta Telegraph, India
    May 5 2005

    A hospital with a history

    - Modern heart institute opens on Friday in condemned house

    A STAFF REPORTER

    Queen Elizabeth and Prince Charles had washed their hands of it. So
    did Mark Tully.

    Yet, Albert Victor Hospital, where Bidhan Chandra Roy had worked till
    his last days, has the potential of turning into the city's best
    institute for cardiovascular sciences.

    Chief minister Buddhadeb Bhattacharjee will inaugurate the Rs
    10-crore, state-of-the-art cardiac facility inside RG Kar Medical
    College and Hospital on Friday. The public works department had
    sought to demolish the building 15 years ago.

    "Its history goes back to 1912, when King George V and Queen Mary had
    donated Rs 5,000 to complete the hospital, named after Queen
    Victoria's grandson, Albert Victor. We have retained the plaque and
    all other historical pieces as evidence. We wanted to turn it into
    the best centre for cardiac diseases and now, our dreams have finally
    been realised," said Abhijit Banerjee, head of cardiology department
    and director of the new institute.

    Banerjee had earlier tried in vain to attract funds from Britain. "I
    had told them that it was their duty to save the hospital and the
    building which was very much British, but they only thanked me for my
    efforts to save the building. The government then decided to mobilise
    grants to save the hospital," said Banerjee.

    Help came from unexpected quarters. The Armenian Church decided to
    allocate Rs 50 lakh for the first time in a non-private health
    facility. Funds rolled in slowly.

    Apart from a well-furnished lobby and reception desk, the hospital is
    equipped with one of the best cath labs, which can take care of cases
    of angioplasty, balloon valvoplasty and stent implants.

    The cardiac operating theatre (OT) is equipped to carry out multiple
    bypass and valve replacement surgeries on a daily basis, apart from
    those for congenital heart diseases and paediatric cases.

    "Unlike other hospitals, the cath lab and the cardiac OT are
    separated by a door. If a patient crashes in the lab, we can
    immediately transfer him to the OT without delay," Banerjee added.

    A 16-bed ICCU and a six-bed post-operative ICU will give a complete
    makeover to the hospital, which has special male and female
    cardiology wards. "A 200-strong-capacity annexe for cardiac patients
    is in the pipeline," Banerjee indicated.

    The government is now scouting for good surgeons and medical staff to
    ensure that the institute achieves the standards it has set for
    itself.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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