A little bit of hari ini dalam sejarah...Bub's hospital.......The Royal Women’s Hospital, Australia’s first public women’s hospital, was established in Melbourne in August 1856 and is among the oldest and most distinguished of its kind in the world today.
Founded as a place where underprivileged women could give birth and receive proper medical and nursing attention, the original title of the hospital was the 'Melbourne Lying-In Hospital and Infirmary for Diseases of Women and Children'Our hospital is now fondly known as the Women's.
The 'Melbourne Lying-In Hospital and Infirmary for Diseases of Women and Children' opened its doors to the poorest and most needy women in 1856, less than two decades after the official foundation of Melbourne (1837).
The Lying-in Hospital was the second hospital established in the bustling town (the first was the Melbourne Hospital). It was first located in a leased terrace house in Albert St, Eastern Hill (East Melbourne), close to where the Victorian Parliament now stands.
The hospital’s establishment was achieved by a committee of women, led by Mrs Frances Perry, the wife of the then Anglican bishop of Melbourne, and two doctors, Dr Richard Tracy and Dr John Maund
| Two years later, the hospital moved to its current site in Carlton with financial support from private benefactors and a colonial government cashed up from goldfields taxes. |
| In 1884, its title was simplified to the Women’s Hospital and the ‘Royal’ title was conferred on the hospital by Her Majesty Queen Elizabeth II on 6 September 1954. |
| The Women's was initially a ‘charity’ hospital, serving the needs of women unable to afford private medical care. Melbourne was marvellous for some but the allure of gold had left many women without support or the means to care for themselves or their children. |
| Demand for the hospital's services was strong and sustained and in its first decade nearly 3,000 women were admitted and many more treated as outpatients. | ||||
| By the second half of the twentieth century, more women gave birth in the Women's maternity section than in any other hospital in the Commonwealth. By the end of the twentieth century, the hospital's neonatal intensive care unit was among the largest and most sophisticated of any in the nation. | ||||
| From the outset, the Women's aimed to lead in setting standards for medical and nursing care, becoming the first Australian hospital to train nurses in the late 1850s and to teach obstetrics and gynaecology to medical students (1865). | ||||
| The hospital maintained close relations with the University of Melbourne medical school (established 1862) and was the first hospital in Melbourne to house a clinical professor (Robert Marshall Allen, Professor of Obstetrics,1929-46). The Women's was also the first place in Australia where a specialist Diploma in Obstetrics and Gynaecology could be undertaken (from 1932).
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| The new $250 million hospital was delivered under the Victorian Government's Partnerships Victoria model. Our new hospital features international best practice in contemporary hospital design including: | ||||||
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| The new Women's is located at the corner of Grattan St and Flemington Rd, Parkville, near the Royal Melbourne Hospital. |

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