Northwest Hospital Sanderbusch

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Nordwest-Krankenhaus Sanderbusch gGmbH
Sponsorship District of Friesland
place Sande (Friesland) , district Sanderbusch
state Lower Saxony
Country Germany
Coordinates 53 ° 30 '24 "  N , 8 ° 0' 32"  E Coordinates: 53 ° 30 '24 "  N , 8 ° 0' 32"  E
executive Director Frank Germeroth
Care level Standard medical care
beds 384
Employee approx. 750
Affiliation Friesland clinics
founding 1939 (naval hospital)
Website www.sanderbusch.de
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Northwest Hospital Sanderbusch

The Nordwest-Krankenhaus Sanderbusch is a standard medical care facility. It is located in the Frisian community of Sande , has around 384 beds and employs around 750 people. The history of the hospital, which was originally designed as a naval hospital, goes back to the 1930s. Before it was built, the hospital grounds belonged to Gut Sanderbusch , a noble residence built around the middle of the 16th century.

history

Bunker at the Northwest Hospital Sanderbusch

In 1936 the Nazi state acquired the extensive area of ​​the Sanderbusch estate . Redmer Daun (1862–1944) is named as the last owner of this traditional aristocratic residence, which was probably built in the middle of the 16th century by the brother of the Jeverland chancellor Remmer van Seediek , previously it was Carl Wilhelm Jaspers, the grandfather of Karl Jaspers . After the purchase by the tax authorities, the estate's park was placed under nature protection and the historic manor under monument protection. Despite the protection guaranteed by the state at the time, the original park was gradually destroyed in the following decades. The old manor fell into disrepair; it was demolished in 1971. Today only the Kastanienallee at the Sanderbusch nursing home indicates the former aristocratic residence.

In 1937 extensive construction work was carried out with the aim of building a military hospital with the necessary administration and supply buildings for the nearby naval site in Wilhelmshaven . This also included apartments and other accommodation options for hospital staff. It was also planned to build a training center for marine paramedics in the immediate vicinity of the hospital. After three years of construction, the majority of the entire complex was put into operation in 1939. The final completion, which also included the construction of the so-called operation bunker , took place in 1942. The bunker , which has five floors and is structurally connected to the hospital, was used to maintain hospital operations during the Second World War in the event of a bomb alarm. During the Cold War , an auxiliary hospital was set up in the bunker as a precaution . The technical systems and furnishings have been preserved to this day and could be reactivated with little effort.

After the end of the Second World War, the hospital buildings were initially used by the Canadian occupying forces. In 1947, the Leipzig gynecologist Herbert Albers initiated the conversion of the marine hospital into a civil hospital. It was opened on April 10, 1947 with 380 beds on a floor space of around 30,000 square meters. The department for internal medicine was headed by Prof. Georg Hessel, the surgical department by Prof. Alfons Lob (until 1955). The nursing service was taken over by the Sisterhood of the Red Cross from Frankfurt an der Oder , which had relocated to Oldenburg in January 1947. Just one month after the hospital was inaugurated, a state-approved nursing school was opened on the premises in Sanderbusch . The Oldenburg State Welfare Association (later name: Oldenburg State Social Aid Association ) was responsible for the entire facility .

In the 1950s, the operations department, which was bombed during World War II, was restored. A nurses' home and a were newly built nursing school . In the 1960s, the hospital buildings and their facilities were extensively modernized. A dialysis department was also set up in 1967 and an intensive care unit in 1971 . 1976 took over the district of Friesland , the ownership of the hospital, the organization now than Regiebetrieb was performed. With the acquisition, the name changed: The Regional Hospital Sanderbusch was in Northwest hospital Sanderbusch renamed.

The last quarter of the 20th century brought further changes. 1982/83 was the Northwest Hospital site of an ADAC - Rescue helicopter . Called name of the station is Christoph 26 (formerly Christopher Friesland ). In 1987 the operations department was rebuilt and expanded. 1994 merged the Jeversche hospital Sophienstiftsplatz with Sander Buscher clinic. Under the common name of Friesland-Kliniken , the two care facilities operated for 12 years as a municipal company of the Friesland district.

In 2006 the Sophienstift hospital was closed and the name Friesland-Kliniken was given up. As early as September 2005, the legal form of the Sanderbusch hospital was changed to a non-profit GmbH . In 2008 the "interdisciplinary central patient admission" was set up. The oncological ward was rebuilt and - connected with it - expanded and modernized in 2009. In the same year, a completely modernized and central sterile supply department was put into operation. In 2010, a large day care center opened as a special offer for parents of small children among hospital staff . It has 10 places.

present

After a comprehensive reorganization, the Northwest Hospital consisted of four centers in 2014, each of which has different clinics and facilities.

Center for anesthesia, intensive care and rescue medicine

This center includes the emergency room, the intensive care unit and the anesthesia clinic , whose doctors are mainly active in rescue medicine . On the homepage of the Sanderbusch hospital it says in this context: "The anesthesiological care of seriously injured patients has a prominent function because Sanderbusch is certified as a trauma center."

Center for Internal Medicine

In this center, to which the areas of gastroenterology , nephrology with dialysis center, oncology , pulmonology and rheumatology are assigned, "diseases of the heart, circulation and blood vessels, lungs and bronchi, kidneys, blood-forming organs, digestive organs and metabolism, as well as tumor , Rheumatism, autoimmune and infectious diseases, allergies and all internal emergencies. "

Center for Neuromedicine

In this center are the departments of neurology with the stroke -Intensivstation Stroke Unit , which opened on 5 May 2014 and Neurosurgery and the Center for Spinal Surgery.

Center for Operative Medicine

In the Center for Operative Medicine, all clinic facilities that deal with the diagnosis and treatment of all general, abdominal and thoracic surgical diseases are networked. So-called minimally invasive surgery is used in many areas .

Personalities associated with the Northwest Hospital (selection)

  • Herbert Albers (1908–2001), founder of the civil hospital Sanderbusch (1947)
  • Franz Schede (1882–1976), 1948 to 1954 head of the Sanderbusch orthopedic clinic

literature

  • Nordwest-Krankenhaus Sanderbusch GmbH (Ed.): Heal, care, be there ... Structured quality report 2010 , Sande 2011.
  • Martin Kaule: North Sea coast 1933–1945 with Hamburg and Bremen. The historical travel guide , Berlin 2011, ISBN 978-3-86153-633-8 , p. 19.

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. Unless otherwise stated, the data and facts in this section are based on the following information: Nordwest-Krankenhaus Sanderbusch: history ; Accessed May 19, 2014.
  2. Karl Jaspers: Fate and Will; Letter from KJ to Pastor Ramsauer, Oldenburg, 1964
  3. ^ Oldenburg district association: Chronicle of the Sanderbusch nursing home. 1946-2006 , Oldenburg 2006; see Section 3 [Prehistory] ( http://www.bezirksverband-oldenburg.de/images_beitraege/einrichtungen/sanderbusch/downloads/Chronik%20Pflegeheim%20Sanderbusch.pdf ( Memento from May 20, 2014 in the Internet Archive ) ).
  4. ^ Bunker Wilhelmshaven: Sanderbusch ; Accessed May 20, 2014.
  5. For the history of the Oldenburg Red Cross Sisterhood see Oldenburg Sisterhood: History ( Memento of the original from November 27, 2013 in the Internet Archive ) Info: The archive link was automatically inserted and not yet checked. Please check the original and archive link according to the instructions and then remove this notice. ; accessed on May 22, 2014. @1@ 2Template: Webachiv / IABot / www.oldenburgische-schwesternschaft.de
  6. Rth.Info: Christoph 26 ; accessed on May 22, 2014.
  7. Nordwest-Krankenhaus Sanderbusch: Center for anesthesia, intensive care and rescue medicine ; accessed on May 23, 2014.
  8. Quoted from Nordwest-Krankenhaus Sanderbusch: Center for Internal Medicine ; accessed on May 23, 2014.
  9. ^ NWZ-online: Milestone for neuromedicine in Sande (April 11, 2014) ; accessed on May 23, 2014.
  10. ^ Northwest Hospital: Center for Operative Medicine ; accessed on May 28, 2014.
  11. Manuel Dichtl: The orthopedist Prof. Dr. Franz Schede (1882-1976). Leben und Werk (dissertation), Regensburg 2012, p. 93 ff. ( PDF file ).