Elbland clinics

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Elblandkliniken Foundation & Co. KG

logo
legal form Foundation & Co. KG
founding 2008
Seat Meissen
management Board member Frank Yuji Ohi
Number of employees 2500
Branch Healthcare
Website www.elblandkliniken.de

The Elblandkliniken are the largest municipal group of hospitals in Saxony with locations in Riesa , Meißen , Radebeul and Großenhain .

Company profile

The Elblandkliniken are a health care provider in the district of Meißen . The Elblandkliniken thus cover the range of medical care for inpatient and outpatient areas in the Saxon Elbland region .

The Elblandkliniken have their own medical vocational school in Meißen and train nurses, medical assistants, technical assistants and IT specialists in system integration. A total of 110 trainees are currently employed in the clinics. On March 31, 2016, the Elbland clinics received the training certificate from the Riesa Employment Agency for their commitment to training young people.

At the same time, the Elblandkliniken are involved in university education and training and are academic teaching hospitals of the TU Dresden .

Corporate structure

The individual locations of the Elbland clinics are:

The Elbland clinics also include Elbland Rehabilitation and Prevention GmbH in Großenhain, Elbland Polikliniken GmbH, the service subsidiary Elbland Service & Logistik GmbH and Elblab GmbH for laboratory services. With its four clinic locations in Meißen, Radebeul, Riesa and Großenhain, the clinic group has over 1,000 beds in the somatic and psychiatric area. Around 2,500 employees are responsible for this.

The Elbland Academy is another building block in in-house personnel development. This is where basic, advanced and advanced training measures for the Elblandkliniken Group are designed, coordinated and carried out.

The clinic group also has the Elblandzwerge company daycare center. Here, the employees can have their children aged between eight weeks and six years looked after.

history

The history of the Elblandkliniken goes back to the middle of the 19th century. In Radebeul it was an association for healing and natural history founded in 1822 that opened the Niederlößnitz hospital in the so-called stone house in 1849 . The listed building is still part of the hospital today. It was extensively renovated a few years ago.

The Riesa hospital roots go back to 1861 when a hospital for the poor was established. In 1880 a Johanniter hospital was built in today's main street, which was closed in 1902. This was followed by the municipal hospital at the current location. In 1868, the foundation stone for medical care was laid with a hospital not far from today's clinic in Großenhain. The current house was built in 1962.

In 1863 a "work and supply house" was built in Meißen. From the infirmary for acutely ill inmates located there, the hospital in Hospitalstrasse with an attached polyclinic was created. This also included the city hospital on Zscheilaer Straße, the women's clinic on the Ratsweinberg and the Domprobstberg branch. In 1998 these locations were replaced by the new hospital building on Nassauweg in Meißen-Bohnitzsch. A medical vocational school has been part of the Meissner hospital since 1992. Today this is part of the Elblandkliniken.

While the Meißen and Radebeul houses merged to form the Meißen-Radebeul Elbland Clinics in 2002, Riesa and Großenhain were merged in 2007 to form a plan hospital. Since April 2008, all four houses together have formed what is today the Elblandkliniken group.

Individual evidence

  1. Press release of March 31, 2016 - The Riesa Employment Agency honors the company's high level of commitment to training with the award of the training certificate from the Federal Employment Agency. Website of the Riesa employment agency. Retrieved April 7, 2016.
  2. Practical year at the Elblandkliniken ( Memento from April 7, 2016 in the web archive archive.today ), website of the Elblandkliniken.
  3. ^ Academic Teaching Hospitals website. Retrieved April 19, 2016.
  4. Homepage of the Elbland Reha Großenhain website. Retrieved April 7, 2016.
  5. ^ Homepage of the Elbland Polyclinics . Retrieved April 7, 2016.
  6. Homepage of the Elbland Academy . Retrieved April 7, 2016.
  7. website of Kita Elbe dwarfs . Retrieved April 7, 2016.
  8. ^ History of the Elbland Clinics ( Memento from February 11, 2013 in the web archive archive.today ).