Royal Victorian Eye and Ear Hospital

Royal Victorian Eye and Ear Hospital
Map
Geography
LocationEast Melbourne, Victoria, Australia
Coordinates37°48′32.8″S 144°58′34.6″E / 37.809111°S 144.976278°E / -37.809111; 144.976278
Organisation
Care systemMedicare
TypeTeaching
Affiliated universityUniversity of Melbourne
La Trobe University
PatronAnthony Howard QC
NetworkInner and Eastern Healthcare Network
Services
Emergency departmentYes
Beds30
SpecialityOphthalmology and otolaryngology
History
Opened1863
Links
Websitewww.eyeandear.org.au

The Royal Victorian Eye and Ear Hospital (the Eye and Ear) is a specialist public teaching hospital in East Melbourne, Australia. It is the only hospital in Australia which specialises in both ophthalmology and otolaryngology.

History

The hospital was established as the Eye and Ear Infirmary in 1863, by Andrew Sexton Gray, an Irish medical practitioner who had emigrated to Victoria. Dr Gray founded the infirmary due to the prevalence of eye and ear diseases at the time, particularly amongst miners on the Victorian gold fields, and also due to poor standards of sanitation and hygiene.[1] In 1870, Gray's infirmary merged with Ophthalmic and Orthopaedic Institution operated by Aubrey Bowen and Ewin Jones, and in 1878 the hospital was granted valuable land by the Victorian government in what was called Tank Reserve in East Melbourne.[2] Its new building was completed in 1883.[3]

In 1978, the Eye and Ear was the site of a pioneering operation to install the world's first multi-channel cochlear implant (Bionic Ear), developed by Graeme Clark.[4] Professor Clark subsequently established the Bionic Ear Institute at the hospital, and one of the laneways through the hospital site was named Bionic Ear Lane to commemorate the research and development by Clark and his team.[5]

Statistics

As of 2013, the RVEEH has 30 inpatient beds and a 10-bed Medihotel. In one year, the hospital treats about 180,000 outpatients, admits about 13,000 inpatients, and performs around 14,000 surgeries. The Emergency Department operates 24 hours a day, and handles around 47,000 presentations a year of which approximately 80 per cent are ophthalmology (eye) cases.[6]

Geography and redevelopment

The hospital comprises three wings: the Aubrey Bowen Wing (built in 1896), the Peter Howson Wing (built in 1974) and the Smorgon Family Wing (commissioned in 1987). There is a tunnel underneath Victoria Parade which links the Eye and Ear to St Vincent's Hospital.[7]

In November 2012, the Victorian Government announced that the hospital would undergo a A$165,000,000 redevelopment, due to be completed in 2018.

In 2021 it began the implementation of a digitisation project designed to improve the way it manages clinic appointments with patient self check-in kiosks and digital display screens to communicate information and waiting times to patients.[8]

Arms

Coat of arms of Royal Victorian Eye and Ear Hospital
Notes
Granted 30 May 1963.[9]
Crest
On a wreath Argent and Gules a falcon Proper ducally crowned Or standing on a closed book fessewise Sable garnished Gold and supporting with the dexter claw a Rod of Aesculapius Or.
Escutcheon
Azure on a cross Gules fimbriated Argent between in the first and fourth quarters an ancient lamp Or enflamed Proper and in the second and third quarters a horn Or a representation of the constellation of the Southern Cross between two anchors in fess Argent.
Supporters
On the dexter side the figure of a surgeon masked and gowned and on the sinister side the figure of a Trained Nursing Sister of the Royal Victorian Eye and Ear Hospital both Proper.
Motto
Teaching Healing Research.

References

  1. ^ Dr Andrew Sexton Gray – Founder 1863–1907, Royal Victorian Eye and Ear Hospital, 2013.
  2. ^ Royal Victorian Eye & Ear Hospital, Aubrey Bowen Wing, 126 - 142 Victoria Pde, East Melbourne, VIC, Australia, Australian Heritage Database, Department of the Environment.
  3. ^ "Trove". trove.nla.gov.au.
  4. ^ Australian Inventor Of The 'Bionic Ear' Conducts The World's First Cochlear Implant Operation, 80 Days That Changed Our Lives, ABC.
  5. ^ What's in a Name? The lanes of East Melbourne, East Melbourne Historical Society.
  6. ^ Senior Medical Officer in Ophthalmology 2013 – Information Package, Mercury Hospital Recruitment, 2013.
  7. ^ The Royal Victorian Eye and Ear Hospital, Open House Melbourne, 2013.
  8. ^ "Melbourne's Royal Victorian Eye and Ear Hospital launches outpatient digitisation project". Building Better Healthcare. 5 March 2021. Retrieved 9 May 2021.
  9. ^ "Royal Victorian Eye and Ear Hospital". Heraldry of the World. Retrieved 29 February 2024.

External links

  • Official website
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