Asklepios Specialist Hospital Brandenburg

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Asklepios Specialist Hospital Brandenburg
Sponsorship Asklepios Fachkliniken Brandenburg GmbH
place Brandenburg on the Havel
state Brandenburg
Country Germany
Coordinates 52 ° 25 '23 "  N , 12 ° 28' 46"  E Coordinates: 52 ° 25 '23 "  N , 12 ° 28' 46"  E
Chief Executive Officer Daniela Wolarz-Weigel
Care level Specialized hospital
beds 433 (2015)
founding 1911
Website https://www.asklepios.com/brandenburg/
Template: Infobox_Krankenhaus / Logo_misst
Template: Infobox_Hospital / Employee_ missing
Template: Infobox_Hospital / Doctors_missing
House 52 of the clinic

The Asklepios Klinikum Brandenburg is a psychiatric and neurological clinic in the district Gorden , Brandenburg . The institution is run by Asklepios Kliniken . The facility is a listed building .

history

1910 to 1933

The order to build an insane asylum in Brandenburg Görden was awarded in March 1910 by the Brandenburg provincial parliament . The institution was built in pavilion style from 1911 according to plans by Theodor Goecke and was completed in 1915. The main institution had 1,600 beds and, in the spirit of the times, was divided into a women's institution (northern part) and a men's institution (southern part). There was a pensioner institution for men and women with a total of 150 beds, a cemetery with an institution church and a guard village. From 1915 to 1919, however, the clinic was used as reserve hospital I and II, and from 1919 it was converted into a sanatorium and nursing home and renamed the Görden state institution .

1933 to 1945

In November 1938, Hans Heinze took over the management of the state institute in Görden , under him the first children's department in the Third Reich was set up for the murder of children and young people in Görden. Of the 4,000 children and adolescents who were admitted between May 1938 and August 1944, around 1,270 died in the institution. From 1939 the institution also served as an intermediate institution for the “euthanasia” campaign T4 , which forwarded its patients to the killing centers in Brandenburg and Bernburg. About 430 underage patients from Görden perished in the T4 campaign. The laboratory of dissection was from 1939 a branch of the Kaiser Wilhelm Institute for Brain Research and was designed by Werner-Joachim Eicke guided

In 1939 there were around 2,088 residents in the Görden institution , in February 1945 there were only around 500 residents.

1945 to 1991

In April 1945 the facility was handed over to the Red Army without a fight and built up and used as a mental hospital by the GDR Ministry of Health in the years that followed. There have been numerous name changes

  • 1953 to 1958: Hospital for Psychiatry Görden, Brandenburg (Havel)
  • 1958 to 1972: District Hospital for Neurology and Psychiatry Görden, Brandenburg (Havel)
  • 1972 to 1991: Brandenburg District Neurological Clinic

1991 until today

After the fall of the Wall , the clinic was renamed the Brandenburg State Clinic in 1991 and in 2006 the clinic was taken over by the Asklepios Clinics .

structure

The Asklepios Fachklinikum Brandenburg today comprises 3 clinics and several specialist areas. In 2015, 6,136 inpatients and 15,118 outpatients were treated.

Clinics

  • Clinic for Neurology, Neurological Intensive Care Medicine - Center for Cerebral Vascular Diseases
  • Clinic for Psychiatry, Psychosomatics and Psychotherapy
  • Clinic for Child and Adolescent Psychiatry, Psychosomatics and Psychotherapy

Departments

There is also a psychiatry museum on the clinic premises. and the Jewish cemetery of the state institute Görden which was restored in 2006.

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Entry in the list of monuments of the Brandenburg State Office for the Preservation of Monuments and the State Archaeological Museum
  2. ^ Marie-Luise Buchinger: City of Brandenburg on the Havel. ( Monument topography of the Federal Republic of Germany , monuments in Brandenburg. Volume 1.2). Wernersche Verlagsanstalt, Worms 1995, ISBN 3-88462-115-7 , pages 174-179
  3. Beatrice Falk, Friedrich Hauer: Brandenburg-Görden, history of a psychiatric hospital . be.bra Wissenschafts verlag GmbH, Berlin 2007, ISBN 978-3-937233-33-8 , p. 13 .
  4. Hans-Walter Schmuhl: The Society of German Neurologists and Psychiatrists in National Socialism . springer, Berlin 2016, ISBN 978-3-662-48743-3 , pp. 296 .
  5. http://www.uvm.edu/~lkaelber/children/goerden/goerden.html
  6. Psychiatry Museum of the City of Brandenburg
  7. Beatrice Falk, Friedrich Hauer: Brandenburg-Görden, history of a psychiatric hospital . be.bra Wissenschafts verlag GmbH, Berlin 2007, ISBN 978-3-937233-33-8 , p. 108-112 .
  8. Beatrice Falk, Friedrich Hauer: Brandenburg-Görden, history of a psychiatric hospital . be.bra Wissenschafts verlag GmbH, Berlin 2007, ISBN 978-3-937233-33-8 , p. 9 .
  9. http://www.maz-online.de/Lokales/Brandenburg-Havel/60-Brandenburger-Behinderte-sollen-umzüge
  10. Quality Report 2015, p. 13
  11. https://www.asklepios.com/brandenburg/unternehmen/klinik-und-kontakt/kurzprofil/