Linkou Chang Gung Memorial Hospital

The Linkou Chang Gung Memorial Hospital (CGMH; Chinese: 林口長庚紀念醫院; pinyin: Lín Kǒu Cháng Gēng Jì Niàn Yī Yuàn) also known as Chang Gung Memorial Hospital or "Chang Gung Hospital", is a hospital located in Guishan District, Taoyuan City, Taiwan. It is part of the Chang Gung Medical Foundation hospital network. The Linkou Chang Gung Memorial Hospital offers nearly 4,000 beds and is among the largest hospitals in bed capacity.[1]

Linkou Chang Gung Memorial Hospital
Geography
LocationNo. 5, Fuxing Street, Taoyuan City, Guishan District, Taiwan
Organisation
TypeGeneral hospital
NetworkChang Gung Medical Foundation
Services
BedsNearly 4,000[1]
History
Opened1978
Links
Websitewww.chang-gung.com/en/

History

The hospital was founded in 1978 focusing on multiple medical specialities. Chang Gung receives an average of 8.2 million annual outpatient visits with 2.4 million inpatient treatment and has an average of 167,460 annual surgical patients. Chang Gung has completed over 1,000 successful liver transplants.[2]

Chang Gung is known for its "craniofacial reconstructive surgery for cleft lips and palates and jaw deformity" and has trained 828 physicians as of 2018. In 2014, Taiwan's Ministry of Health and Welfare recorded approximately 2,700 physicians from around the world have trained at hospitals in Taiwan.[3]

Linkou Chang Gung Memorial Hospital have shown that during cardiac arrest there is "a 60% chance to restart the heart at the hospital" with prior CPR and a 32% chance if no CPR is administered prior. Immediate CPR may "double the chance of survival for children who experience out-of-hospital cardiac arrest".[4]

Transportation

The hospital has the Chang Gung Memorial Hospital metro station which assists in transport.[5] The station is currently one of the five express stations on the line.[6]

See also

References

  1. "Overview". Retrieved 31 May 2020.
  2. "The Largest Hospitals in the World". WorldAtlas. 5 October 2017. Retrieved 16 December 2019.
  3. Wijaya, Callistasia Anggun (2018-12-12). "Taiwan's advanced medical technology gives patients new hope". The Jakarta Post. Retrieved 16 December 2019.
  4. Xie, Dennis (2016-12-13). "CPR for children in cardiac arrest may double survival rate". taipeitimes.com. Retrieved 16 December 2019.
  5. "Chang Gung Memorial Hospital Station". Taoyuan Metro. Archived from the original on 2017-03-05. Retrieved 2017-03-04.
  6. "Airport MRT begins commercial operations". The China Post. 2017-03-02. Retrieved 2017-03-02.

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