Gartnavel General Hospital, Glasgow
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This hospital is part of NHS Greater Glasgow and Clyde
General hospital information
- Number of beds: N/A
- % of single rooms: N/A
- Total parking spaces: N/A
- Average parking fee per hour: N/A
Address & description

The 465-bed Gartnavel General Hospital operates in close partnership with the Western Infirmary. A broad range of medical and surgical sub-specialities are provided, supported by an eight-theatre inpatient operating department. As the base for many of West Glasgow's ambulatory care facilities, Gartnavel has a four-theatre day surgery unit, endoscopy suite, imaging department (including CT and interventional radiology) and main concentration of out-patient accommodation.
The breadth and complexity of services at Gartnavel have expanded considerably over the past few years, with the development of the Brownlee Centre for communicable diseases, the new Glasgow Homeopathic Hospital and the new ophthalmology department. As Gartnavel General and the Western Infirmary are effectively one acute service facility on two sites, the long-term plan is to gradually transfer and modernise services from the Western site to the Gartnavel site.
* this profile text was provided by NHS Greater Glasgow and Clyde
Consultants at Gartnavel General Hospital
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Accident & Emergency services at Gartnavel General Hospital
cardiac services (heart attack) |
National average | |
|---|---|---|
| Patients having thrombolytic treatment within 30 minutes of arriving at hospital |
N/A
The National Service Framework (NSF) for coronary heart disease (CHD) states that 75% of eligible heart attack patients in England should receive thrombolytic drugs within 30 minutes of arriving at hospital. Read more about this indicator.
|
N/A |
| Patients having thrombolytic treatment within 60 minutes of calling for help |
N/A
This standard reflects the combined performance of the ambulance service, general practitioners (GPs) and hospitals and is the most relevant overall indicator of care of heart attack patients. It encourages collaborative working across all relevant NHS organisations, particularly between ambulance services and hospitals to reduce delays to thrombolytic treatment. The call for professional help will usually be direct to the ambulance service but may be to a GP or NHS Direct. The Department of Health has set NHS organisations in England the target of 68% of patients receiving thrombolytic treatment within 60 minutes of calling for professional help. Read more about this indicator
|
N/A |
| Primary angioplasty within 90 minutes of arrival at interventional centre door |
N/A
An interim good practice standard of 90 minutes from arrival at an interventional hospital to the time when the blocked artery is reopened (door to balloon time) has been established for provision of primary angioplasty, based on international guidelines.
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N/A |
| Patients discharged from hospital on secondary prevention medication | ||
| Asprin | N/A | N/A |
| Beta blocker | N/A | N/A |
| Statins | N/A | N/A |
| ACE inhibitor | N/A | N/A |
| Clopidogrel | N/A | N/A |
