Baghdad Medical City

Coordinates: 33°20′42″N 44°22′41″E / 33.34506°N 44.37814°E / 33.34506; 44.37814
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Baghdad Medical City (مدينة الطب) formerly known as Saddam Medical City (1983-2003) and before that known as Medical City Teaching Hospital (1973-1983) is a complex of several teaching hospitals in Bab Al-Moatham, Baghdad, Iraq. The complex stands where the former Garden of Ridvan of Baghdad was.

The Medical City includes the Baghdad University College of Medicine. The largest hospital in the complex is the Surgical Specialties Hospital built in 1980. The second largest is the Baghdad Teaching Hospital, opened in 1970,[1] which contains the out patient clinics and the emergency department. The complex has over a thousand beds for patients.

Baghdad's Medical City

Facilities & Buildings:

  • Baghdad Teaching Hospital
  • Surgical Specialties Hospital (the same building includes Iraqi Center for Cardiac Diseases, Toxicology Center and Kidney Transplant Center)
  • Private Nursing Home Hospital
  • Child Protection Teaching Hospital (the same building includes Bone Marrow Transplant Center)
  • Medical City Department (General Management Department)
  • Central Laboratories
  • institute of radiology
  • Pasteur Institute
  • Physiotherapy Departments in all hospitals & centres links directly to the rehabilitation department in MoH
  • Tuberculosis Health Center (TB and Chest Institute)
  • National Center for Blood Transfusion
  • Gastroenterology & Hepatology centre.
  • Specialized Burn Hospital.
  • Medical and Health libraries with internet centres.
  • Medicolegal Center, Forensics pathology department.
  • Medical and healthcare Schools
  • Doctors, health and medical specialities residency housing
  • Police Department.

Financial crisis[edit]

In 2008 there was only one working elevator, out of ten, in the 18 storey building and no air-conditioning.[2]

In February 2016, the hospital, like all public hospitals in Iraq, began to charge patients for individual services. It was expected that supplies of advanced medical equipment like pacemakers and stents will run out during 2016.[3]

See also[edit]

The Iraqi Center for Heart Diseases

References[edit]

  1. ^ McDonell, Nick (5 May 2016). "Diary". London Review of Books. Retrieved 2 May 2016.
  2. ^ "Americans Think Iraq Is 'Improving' But in Its Best Hospitals, Not Even the Elevators Work". Alternet. 26 September 2008. Retrieved 2 May 2016.
  3. ^ McDonell, Nick (5 May 2016). "Diary". London Review of Books. Retrieved 2 May 2016.

33°20′42″N 44°22′41″E / 33.34506°N 44.37814°E / 33.34506; 44.37814