Carl Thiem Clinic Cottbus
Carl-Thiem-Klinikum gGmbH | |
---|---|
Sponsorship | City of Cottbus (public) |
place | cottbus |
state | Brandenburg |
Country | Germany |
Coordinates | 51 ° 44 ′ 35 " N , 14 ° 19 ′ 22" E |
executive Director | Götz Brodermann |
Care level | Main focus supply |
beds | 1,203 |
Employee | 2,300 |
including doctors | 300 |
founding | April 1, 1914 |
Website | www.ctk.de |
The Carl-Thiem-Klinikum Cottbus (CTK) is the largest hospital in the state of Brandenburg in terms of beds . With around 2500 employees, it is also the largest employer in the city of Cottbus .
The CTK was founded on April 1, 1914 as the United Städtische und Thiemsche Heilanstalt , named after the initiator and co-founder Carl Thiem . Between 1952 and 1991 it was called the Cottbus District Hospital . After the fall of the Wall in 1991 it was given its current name. The CTK is an academic teaching hospital of the Berlin Charité , the Martin Luther University Halle and the Technical University of Dresden . It has 21 sub-clinics, two institutes and numerous certified centers. The Carl-Thiem-Klinikum celebrated its 100th anniversary in 2014. The Sana Heart Center Cottbus , the institute for transfusion medicine of the DRK including blood donation service and the Ronald McDonald House Cottbus are in the immediate vicinity of the clinic .
Building history
The main building on Thiemstrasse is a listed building. The United Städtische und Thiemsche Heilanstalt was built in Art Nouveau style from 1912 to 1914 according to plans by the Hamburg architect Friedrich Ruppel . Officially inaugurated on June 27, 1914, it was the largest hospital in this region, headed by Carl Thiem, which meant for him the achievement of the ultimate goal of a life's work. At the end of 1920, the side wings were built, where the X-ray department and official apartments were housed. At that time, around 500 beds were occupied, but the occupancy doubled as early as World War II because part of the sanatorium was used as a hospital.
About 90% of the hospital was destroyed in the great bombing raid on February 15, 1945 . Until the end of 1949, inpatient care had to be provided in neighboring cities. In 1952, the rebuilt hospital became a district hospital. The economic development and the growing number of inhabitants made extensions and alterations necessary after 1970; The foundation stone for a new building was laid on October 1, 1975, and work lasted until 1983.
In 1991 the district hospital was renamed the Carl-Thiem-Klinikum , in the entrance area of the old building there is a bust of the founder. In 1993 another renovation and modernization measure began, which is still ongoing today. The 90-bed building that was put into operation in June 1997 or the nuclear medicine ward that has been active since October 1997 are examples of the renovations that have taken place. In 2016, a new mother-child house, a new main entrance - the third in the history of the house - and a completely rebuilt emergency room were added. In 2019, a new multi-storey car park was opened at the main entrance on Leipziger Strasse.
Centers, clinics and institutes
- Centers
- Certified oncological center (including visceral oncological center with colorectal cancer center, pancreatic cancer center, focus on gastrointestinal tumors), head and neck tumor center, prostate cancer center (with a focus on urological tumors), gynecological cancer center, breast cancer center (transit), skin tumor center (transit)
- Certified endoprosthetics center for maximum care
- Certified foot and ankle surgery center
- Certified supraregional trauma center
- Certified Diabetes Center (DDG)
- Certified Center for Multiple Sclerosis
- Social Pediatric Center
- Spinal center
- Institutes
- pathology
- radiology
- Departments
- Clinic for anesthesiology, intensive therapy and palliative medicine
- Eye clinic
- Surgical Clinic
- Clinic for Trauma, Reconstructive and Hand Surgery
- Women's Clinic
- Clinic for Dermatology, Venereology and Allergology
- Clinic for ENT Diseases, Head and Neck Surgery
- Clinic for Pediatric and Adolescent Medicine
- Radiation Oncology and Radiation Therapy Clinic
- I. Medical clinic (cardiology, rhythmology, angiology)
- II. Medical clinic (diabetology, nephrology, oncology)
- III. Medical Clinic (Pneumology)
- IV. Medical Clinic (gastroenterology, rheumatology)
- Clinic for oral, maxillofacial and reconstructive surgery
- Neurosurgery Clinic
- Department of Neurology
- emergency department
- Nuclear Medicine Clinic
- Orthopedic Clinic
- Clinic for Psychiatry, Psychotherapy and Psychosomatics
- Urological clinic
- Department of Geriatrics
- Center for laboratory medicine, microbiology and hospital hygiene
- Physiotherapy department
- Quality seals and certificates
- KTQ certification for the entire house
- FOCUS seal of the top regional hospital
- Oncological center (including visceral oncological center (with colorectal cancer center, pancreatic cancer center, focus on gastrointestinal tumors)), head and neck tumor center, prostate cancer center (with focus on urological tumors), gynecological cancer center, breast cancer center (transit), skin tumor center (transit)
- Endoprosthetics center for maximum care
- Certified foot and ankle surgery center
- Certified supraregional trauma center
- Certified Diabetes Center (DDG)
- Certified Center for Multiple Sclerosis
- Perinatal Center Level 1
- Certified stroke unit
- Certified Chest Pain Unit
- Certified sterile supply
- Accredited laboratory
- Certified molecular diagnostics
See also
- Ernst-Rulo Welcker (1904–1971), head of surgery from 1946 to 1970, medical director
- Josef Horntrich (1930–2017), surgeon, medical director from 1990 to 1999
literature
- David Korsten: "The hospital, an ornament of the city." The Carl-Thiem-Klinikum Cottbus between 1914 and 2014. History Office, Cologne 2014. ISBN 978-3-940371-31-7 .
Web links
- Entry in the monument database of the State of Brandenburg
- Website of the Carl Thiem Clinic
- Feuerwehr-Cottbus .org: Site plan of the clinic ( Memento from January 4, 2014 in the web archive archive.today )
Individual evidence
- ↑ About us. In: ctk.de. Carl-Thiem-Klinikum Cottbus gGmbH, accessed on June 2, 2020 .
- ↑ About us. In: www.ctk.de. Carl-Thiem-Klinikum Cottbus gGmbH, accessed on June 5, 2020 .
- ↑ a b CTK: On the history of the house ( Memento from February 10, 2013 in the web archive archive.today )
- ↑ CTK: Saxon students will study in Cottbus in future. CTK becomes academic teaching hospital of the TU Dresden ( Memento from June 10, 2013 in the web archive archive.today )
- ↑ List of monuments of the State of Brandenburg: City of Cottbus (PDF) Brandenburg State Office for Monument Preservation and State Archaeological Museum