Jeroen Bosch Hospital

Jeroen Bosch Ziekenhuis
Jeroen Bosch Hospital is located in Netherlands
Jeroen Bosch Hospital
Jeroen Bosch Hospital
The Netherlands
Geography
Location's-Hertogenbosch, Boxtel and Zaltbommel, Netherlands
Coordinates51°41′04″N 5°16′39″E / 51.684555°N 5.277437°E / 51.684555; 5.277437
Organisation
TypeGeneral
Services
Emergency departmentYes
Beds1120
HelipadYes
History
Opened2011
Links
Websitehttps://www.jeroenboschziekenhuis.nl/
ListsHospitals in Netherlands

The Jeroen Bosch Hospital (Dutch: Jeroen Bosch Ziekenhuis, JBZ) is a general hospital in 's-Hertogenbosch. The building at the current location on the Henri Dunantlaan was opened in 2011.

History

Created by mergers

The Jeroen Bosch Hospital resulted from multiple mergers. First a merger between the originally Protestant Willem-Alexander Hospital and the originally Roman Catholic Groot Ziekengasthuis created the Bosch Medicentrum. Next Bosch Medicentrum merged with the Carolus-Liduina general hospital. The new hospital was named after the most famous citizen of 's-Hertogenbosch, Hieronymus Bosch.

Current building

At the location of the Willem Alexander hospital construction of a new hospital started in November 2007.[1] It had to be large enough to replace the three former locations in 's-Hertogenbosch. The former Willem-Alexander Hospital was integrated in the new building, and is now used primarily for offices and laboratories. The new building was delivered in December 2010.[2] The hospitals moved in during April and May 2011.[3] The official opening of the new hospital was done by Crown Prince Willem-Alexander on 24 June 2011.[4]

Covid-19 / Coronavirus

Special Covid-19 heli pad in fall 2020

In the Netherlands the early 2020 outbreak of the coronavirus was especially intense in North Brabant. Many inhabitants had been infected on vacation in Austria and Northern Italy. Next they had spread the virus further during Carnival, which is a feast typical for North Brabant and Limburg.[5] It resulted in a high reproduction rate for the virus in North Brabant, and the Jeroen Bosch Hospital becoming especially busy at the time. The hospital even created a temporary extra helipad to transport patients to other hospitals by helicopter.

One of the reasons the hospital became so busy treating Covid-19 patients, was that inhabitants of North Brabant that got the virus became much more ill than other Dutchmen. This became visible when maps of victims of Q fever and Corona, and the presence of Intensive animal farming were shown side by side. The correlation was clear, but the causality was less clear. Ignas van Bebber, a surgeon of the JBZ was already involved in research of the effects of particulates. He blamed the high amount of ammonia emitted by animal farms for causing permanent damage to the lung tissue of people living close by. People in Breda and Tilburg celebrated carnival just as well as the people east of 's-Hertogenbosch. However, the air pollution east of 's-Hertogenbosch caused that people living there were much more likely to die from an infection.[6]

Services

Locations

The hospital serves an area of 360.000 inhabitants. Therefore there are multiple auxiliary locations in 's-Hertogenbosch and surroundings. Some of them, like the one in Boxtel offer advanced diagnostics. Most of them are simple posts for blood tests, collection of urine or feces samples, or to investigate for possible thrombosis.

  • Location 's-Hertogenbosch (Henri Dunantstraat 1) (primary location)
  • Location Boxtel (Liduinahof 35)
  • Location Drunen (Tinie de Munnikstraat 17)
  • Location Rosmalen (De Hoef 90)
  • Location Zaltbommel (Kerkstraat 1 en Gamerschestraat 32a)
  • Jeroen Bosch Diagnostics (several locations primarily for blood tests in and near 's-Hertogenbosch)
  • Sport Medical Center (Marathonloop 9 in 's-Hertogenbosch)
  • Thrombosis services (severals posts in and near 's-Hertogenbosch)

Specializations, research and education

The Jeroen Bosch hospital has 4,000 employees and 240 physicians and surgeons in 29 medical specialisms.[7] These offer almost any medical specialism, leading to a yearly total of 500,000 outpatient treatments, and 60,000 inpatient treatments. It also performs research.[8]

Education and training is part of the mission of Jeroen Bosch Hospital. The hospital trains new doctors. I.e. doctors which have already attended university elsewhere learn a medical specialism in the hospital. For new nurses there is a school that combines theoretical and practical education.[8]

The specialist rehabilitation hospital Tolbrug is connected to the hospital. It helps patients to rejoin society after severe disease or injury. As a rehabilitation hospital it stands at some distance from the organization of regular hospital care. E.g. the negotiations with insurance companies about rehabilitation care are done separately. It makes that Tolbrug reports only to the executive board of the hospital, and that it e.g. has a separate entrance near the main entrance of the hospital.[9]

References

  • Buiting, Piet Hein (2016), Jaardocument 2015 [Annual Report over 2015] (PDF) (in Dutch), Jeroen Bosch Ziekenhuis
  • Buiting, Piet Hein (2018), Jaardocument 2017 [Annual Report over 2017] (PDF) (in Dutch), Jeroen Bosch Ziekenhuis
  • Kriele, Paul (2008), Aanloop en overzicht nieuwbouw JB-ziekenhuis [Beginnings and overview of the construction of the JB hospital] (in Dutch), Bastion Oranje
  • Kriele, Paul (2011), Grootscheepse verhuizing GZG naar JB-ziekenhuis [Large move from GZG to JB hospital] (in Dutch), Bastion Oranje
  • Spaan, Willy (2012), Jaardocument 2011 [Annual Report over 2011] (PDF) (in Dutch), Jeroen Bosch Ziekenhuis

Notes

  1. ^ Kriele 2008.
  2. ^ "Nieuwbouw Jeroen Bosch Ziekenhuis opgeleverd". Bastion Oranje. 24 December 2010. Retrieved 26 September 2020.
  3. ^ Kriele 2011.
  4. ^ "Prins opent ziekenhuis met glazen bol". Brabants Dagblad. 24 June 2011. Retrieved 26 September 2020.
  5. ^ "60 nieuwe coronabesmettingen, de meeste in Brabant. Wat is daar aan de hand?" [60 new infections, most of them in Brabant. What is happening there?]. Trouw. 7 March 2020. Retrieved 26 September 2020.
  6. ^ "Zorgt de veehouderij voor meer coronadoden in Oost-Brabant?" [Does animal farming cause more Corona fatalities in East (North) Brabant?]. Trouw. 30 April 2020. Retrieved 26 September 2020.
  7. ^ "Jeroen Bosch Ziekenhuis". Bureau STZ. 2020. Retrieved 27 September 2020.
  8. ^ a b "Over Ons". Jeroen Bosch Ziekenhuis. 2020. Retrieved 26 September 2020.
  9. ^ Buiting 2018.
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