Mittelbaden Baden-Baden Ebersteinburg Clinic

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Mittelbaden Baden-Baden Ebersteinburg Clinic
Sponsorship Klinikum Mittelbaden gGmbH , AöR
place Baden-Baden - Ebersteinburg
state Baden-Württemberg
Country Germany
Coordinates 48 ° 46 ′ 34 "  N , 8 ° 16 ′ 26"  E Coordinates: 48 ° 46 ′ 34 "  N , 8 ° 16 ′ 26"  E
Website www.klinikum-mittelbaden.de
Template: Infobox_Krankenhaus / Logo_misst
Template: Infobox_Krankenhaus / Betten_mehlt
Template: Infobox_Hospital / Employee_ missing
Template: Infobox_Hospital / Doctors_missing

The Mittelbaden Baden-Baden Bühl Clinic, Ebersteinburg Clinic is a basic medical care hospital with 60 beds in Ebersteinburg , Baden-Baden , and has been part of the Mittelbaden Clinic since January 1, 2013 . The management of the Mittelbaden Clinic is also located at this location.

history

In 1906 Rumpf opened the Ebersteinburg sanatorium as a “sanatorium for women with mild lung disease”. Rumpf worked in Davos for many years and was most recently chief physician at the major Baden sanatoriums in Friedrichsheim and Luisenheim. The construction he had initially planned in Gunzenbachtal failed due to the lack of a building permit. The summer residence of the emperors and kings did not want any tuberculosis sufferers in the city. So he went up to the then still free community Ebersteinburg, where the first water pipe had just been laid as a hygienic requirement.

The sanatorium was planned and built by the Baden-Baden architect L. Hengst. Almost all of the 40 hospital rooms were south-facing and had “the most perfect possible combination of comfort and hygiene”. The sick spent part of the day in the attached halls, which could be opened either to the south or north.

The founder, Rumpf, moved to Bremen with his family in 1913. His two assistants, the brothers Adolf and Karl Albert, took over the medical management of the sanatorium. It was continued as a lung sanatorium until 1937.

The Sisters of the Divine Redeemer bought the Ebersteinburg sanatorium in 1938. It was continued as a general sanatorium under the direction of Adolf Albert. Shortly after the outbreak of World War II, it was confiscated by the Air Force as accommodation for an artillery unit, later as an Air Force military hospital. After the end of the war, the French army occupied the sanatorium and closed the hospital within a short time. At the beginning of 1947 the nuns were able to take over the house on their own again. After a thorough renovation, the house was reopened as the Ebersteinburg sanatorium with 65 beds.

Under the direction of von und zu Loewenstein, the Ebersteinburg sanatorium gained a good reputation and cared for patients from all over Germany, including several times the famous conductor Wilhelm Furtwängler , who died in the Ebersteinburg sanatorium in 1954.

In the years between 1957 and 1970, further modernizations and extensions were necessary. The refectory and the enclosure above the dining room were created. The reclining halls had to make way for a modern extension next to the main building with hospital rooms, roof terrace and baths department as well as a new hospital chapel. Furthermore, a modern large kitchen was built. In 1970, construction of the “Maria Frieden” nurses' home on the site above the hospital began. Older nuns were housed and cared for here. In 1972 the school for nursing assistants was opened.

In 1973 the Karlsruhe regional council classified the house as a specialist hospital for internal diseases with 94 beds. Since then it has been accessible to all statutory and privately insured patients with internal diseases. In 1978 Schott, who had previously been senior physician in the sanatorium for 22 years, became the hospital's chief physician. In the following years he successfully converted from a sanatorium into an internal hospital. In 1994 M. Schley took over the medical management of the Ebersteinburg Hospital. He expanded the spectrum by setting up an endoscopy department.

The 1997 health reform reduced the number of beds to 60. The order then decided to build the Hospice Capernaum on the third floor, which was inaugurated in August 1998. In the years 2001–2003 the wards were completely renovated and modernized. All rooms have handicapped accessible wet cells. Since January 1, 2013, the Ebersteinburg Hospital has been part of the Mittelbaden Clinic Group.

Medical departments

  • Clinic for Palliative Medicine
  • Pain therapy

Web links