Third Order Clinic

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Third Order Clinic
Sponsorship Third order clinics gGmbH
place Neuhausen-Nymphenburg
state BavariaBavaria Bavaria
Country GermanyGermany Germany
Coordinates 48 ° 9 '56 "  N , 11 ° 30' 17"  E Coordinates: 48 ° 9 '56 "  N , 11 ° 30' 17"  E
management Markus Morell, Harald Schrödel, Reinhard Schmidt
beds 574 beds and 44 semi-inpatient places
Employee 1,857
areas of expertise Anesthesia and intensive medicine, general, visceral, vascular and thoracic surgery, internal medicine, gynecology and obstetrics, pediatric and adolescent medicine, pediatric surgery, radiology and nuclear medicine, trauma and reconstructive surgery
founding February 1, 1912
Website www.dritter-orden.de
Template: Infobox_Krankenhaus / Logo_misst
Template: Infobox_Hospital / Doctors_missing

The Third Order Clinic in the Nymphenburg district of Munich is supported by the Third Order Clinics gGmbH.

Third Order Hospital

History of the Sisterhood of Sick Care of the Third Order

As in other major German cities, in Munich at the end of the 19th century there was great need among the sick and old who needed care, especially if they belonged to the lower classes. They were either discharged from the hospitals or not even admitted to the hospital, which were considered incurable or protracted.

The awareness grew more and more in parts of the population that something had to be changed about the grievances in health care. A possibility for this was seen in the expansion and construction of hospitals. However, this alone was not enough because of the increasing population and growing demands.

The director of the third-order parish of St. Anton in Munich, Father Petrus Eder (Capuchin), recognized the circumstances of the time and wanted to contribute to the change as much as possible. During his home visits he was confronted with the plight of the sick: "Above all, something must be done for the benefit of the non-privileged classes and the poor." More and more he was urged from different places to realize his expressed plans about the establishment of a sick aid with his religious community. He was intensely encouraged, encouraged and actively supported by the influential Terziarinnen Princess Ludwig Ferdinand of Bavaria and Baroness von Strauss.

From October 6, 1901, the "Third Order Sickness Aid" began its work in the St. Anton congregation, which had over 6,000 members and spread all over Munich, despite some reservations and reservations and therefore without much fuss. Father Petrus had been able to win over a few private nurses who belonged to the Third Order and who had good certificates as well as proof of passed nursing examinations. The sisters were to live freely as independent terziaresses, but were to be united in a professional group. A registration and switching office was set up in the apartment of the Terziarin Baroness von Strauss in Landwehrstrasse. 1 set up.

In the course of 1902, some terziar women who were already professionally active as secular sisters in the sick, postpartum and child care reported. All agreed to put their professional activity in the service of the Third Order.

Foundation of the “Organized Welfare and Sick Care of the Third Order” at St. Anton in Munich

Only after the end of a first year of operation, which was regarded as a probationary period, during which proof had been provided to the relevant authorities that the Third Order was able to successfully provide nursing care without interfering with the jurisdiction or interests of third parties, did they enter on October 12, 1902 with the "Organized Poor and Sick Care of the Third Order near St. Anton in Munich" before the general public.

Caused by a sermon that Father Petrus Eder gave at the monthly meeting of the Third Order and with which he asked the members of the order to participate in the care by presenting the grievances in health care, the interest on the part of the tertiary increased enormously.

Establishment of outpatient nursing branches

Third order congregations as such were spread all over Bavaria. From 1907 onwards, the first of them were won over to work on the sick care work that had begun in Munich. The branches founded in each case worked independently, but were connected to the Munich headquarters. In the following years up to 1910 branch associations and stations were established in many places in quick succession. They extended mainly over the whole of Upper and Lower Bavaria.

Bringing the foster sisters together in a common household

Originally the sisters were completely on their own. They only had to attend monthly religious and professional education conferences, but each had to take care of themselves. The sisters lived scattered around the city, some with their relatives, others lived in smaller groups in rented apartments. Although they could keep the maintenance fees, they had to earn their entire living from it.

The successor of Father Petrus Eder, Father Canisius König, who took over the management of sick care in 1908, considered it important and sensible to give the sisters a fixed focus and to provide sick care through the union of the sisters into a secular professional sorority of the Third Order remodel.

History of the clinic

1912 - Construction of a hospital as a training facility

Very soon after the establishment of health care, the desire arose to found their own training hospital in order to optimally prepare the sisters for outpatient care. This request resulted in particular from the limited possibilities to accommodate the student nurses in the Munich hospitals for practical training. In their own hospital, the nurses were able to be trained up-to-date, in accordance with regulations and more intensively than before in the “auxiliary hospitals”. Courses were held every year on March 1st and October 1st.

Expansion and development of health care after 1914

During the First World War, the sick welfare organization made the hospital in Nymphenburg available as an auxiliary hospital. Many third order sisters were deployed in the front hospitals. After the end of the war, a separate welfare facility for war survivors was set up. One branch that was significantly expanded after 1914 was the establishment of lung care stations, from which follow-up treatment in sanatoriums was also arranged.

The infant and toddler welfare stations were expanded with the aim of advising mothers on baby care and nutrition and supporting families in need with children's clothing and care products.

The Nymphenburg Hospital has expanded several times over the decades. In 1937 the number of beds rose to 320. After the addition of the east wing, the bed capacity was 522.

In 1979 the Third Order Hospital was named the Academic Teaching Hospital of the Ludwig Maximilians University (LMU) in Munich, and in 1984 a municipal ambulance was permanently stationed at the hospital. In the course of the overall renovation of the entire hospital complex that became necessary, a new functional building was built in 1988. In a second construction phase, a 300-bed building was completed, which took into account the most modern knowledge of in-patient care and optimal patient care. On July 29, 1998, the foundation stone for the new children's clinic in the Third Order Clinic was laid on the site to replace the children's clinic in need of renovation on Lachnerstrasse , which was put into operation on May 2, 2002 and used as a perinatal center - Level II. With the new construction and commissioning of the children's clinic on the Nymphenburg area, the total number of beds rose to 589 in 2002.

On January 1, 2003, the Third Order Clinic was awarded supply level III (corresponds to today's supply level II). In the same year, the PATRIZIA KinderHaus Foundation created the recognized social-medical aftercare concept “Bunter Kreis Children's Clinic Third Order” in an extension. On September 13, 2006, the topping-out ceremony of the Nymphenburg Diagnosis and Therapy Center was celebrated on the grounds of the Third Order Clinic.

Data

Today the clinic has 574 beds, 44 semi-inpatient places and employs 1,857 people. Around 33,500 inpatients are cared for annually and 63,000 patients are treated in the emergency room. In addition to around 2,800 deliveries per year, around 11,100 operations take place in the inpatient and another 1,900 in the outpatient area.


Clinics and sections

  • Clinic for General, Visceral, Vascular and Thoracic Surgery / Vascular Surgery Section
  • Clinic for Anesthesia and Intensive Care Medicine
  • Clinic for joint replacement, orthopedic surgery and trauma / reconstructive surgery
  • Pediatric Orthopedics Section
  • Clinic for Gynecology and Obstetrics
  • Clinic for Internal Medicine I
  • Clinic for Internal Medicine II
  • Clinic for Pediatric Surgery / Pediatric Orthopedics Section
  • Clinic for Pediatric and Adolescent Medicine
  • Center for Radiology and Nuclear Medicine Nymphenburg


Centers

  • Competence center for thyroid and parathyroid surgery / endocrine surgery
  • Competence center for minimally invasive surgery
  • Chest Pain Unit
  • Oncology Center
  • Intestinal center
  • Breast center
  • Gynecological Tumor Center
  • Local trauma center
  • Outpatient operation center
  • Perinatal Center
  • Social Pediatric Center (SPZ)
  • Therapy Center for Eating Disorders (TCE)


Document departments

  • Otorhinolaryngology
  • Pediatric surgery
  • Oral and maxillofacial surgery
  • Plastic and aesthetic surgery

Web links

Commons : Third Order Clinic  - collection of images, videos and audio files