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Entries
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Botkin Memorial Hospital For Infectious Diseases
Botkin Memorial Hospital For Infectious Diseases
Categories /
Medicine. Public Health/Hospitals and Clinics
BOTKIN MEMORIAL HOSPITAL FOR INFECTIOUS DISEASES, city hospital number 30 (3/4 Mirgorodskaya Street) founded on the initiative Professor Y.P. Chudnovsky in 1882 as the Alexandrovskaya Municipal Barracks Hospital with 300 beds. It was housed in the wooden barracks on the former Alexandrovsky Parade Grounds (hence the name) and was intended for patients with infectious diseases. From the very beginning the barracks had water and electricity supply lines. The first disinfection plant in Russia was installed in the Hospital for Infectious Diseases (1883), there was a carriage for the transportation of patients, water from the Neva was examined and research work was developed. In 1889 it was called Botkin City Barracks Hospital. In the 1930s it was reconstructed, and new stone wings were added; at that time the hospital received the name of the Clinical Hospital for Infectious Diseases. In the 1960s-70s 5 modern wings were added. It serves as a clinical base for all chairs of infectious diseases in St. Petersburg medical institutes. In1995, it became the city's central infections service. It has a hospital (with 1,200 beds) and a polyclinic. N.P. Gundobin, F.I. Pasternatsky, V.P. Sirotinin and other scientists worked at the hospital, as did writer V.V. Veresaev (Smidovich). On the territory of the hospital there is a monument to Botkin (sculptor I.Y. Ginzburg). References: Фигурина М. М. Ленинградская инфекционная больница им. С. П. Боткина, 1882-1961. Л., 1961. T. I. Grekova.
Persons
Botkin Sergey Petrovich
Chudnovsky Yu.T.
Ginzburg Ilya Yakovlevich
Gundobin Nikolay Petrovich
Pasternatsky Fedor Ignatievich
Sirotinin Vasily Nikolaevich
Veresaev (born Smidovich) Vikenty Vikentievich
Addresses
Mirgorodskaya St./Saint Petersburg, city, house 3/4
Bibliographies
Фигурина М. М. Ленинградская инфекционная больница им. С. П. Боткина, 1882-1961. Л., 1961
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Alexandrovsky Parade Ground
ALEXANDROVSKY PARADE GROUND, the historical name of the territory in the south-west of the city center, around the Alexander Nevsky Lavra, north of Obvodnoy Canal and west of the Monastyrka River
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Botkin S. P., (1832-1889), doctor
BOTKIN Sergey Petrovich (1832-1889), doctor, public figure, Doctor of Medicine (1860), Secret Councillor (1877). He graduated from the Faculty of Medicine of Moscow University (1855)
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Gegello A.I. (1891-1965), architect.
GEGELLO Alexander Ivanovich (1891-1965), architect. Resided in St. Petersburg since 1910. Graduated from the College of Civil Engineers (1920) and from the Academy of Fine Arts, Higher School of Art and Technology (1923)
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Health Service (common)
HEALTH SERVICE, PUBLIC. The first stationary medical institutions in St. Petersburg were military hospitals for the army and the navy (opened in 1715 and 1717)
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Hospitals (common)
HOSPITALS. The first hospital in St. Petersburg, the Kalinkinsky Hospital was founded as a police-correctional institution for "indecent women and girls" (1762)
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Ivashentsov G. A., (1883-1933), doctor of infectious diseases
IVASHENTSOV Gleb Alexandrovich (1883-1933, Leningrad), doctor of infectious diseases, organiser of hospitals. He graduated from the Military Medical Academy (1907)
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Oldenburgsky Family
OLDENBURGSKY (v. Oldenburg), dukes and princes, the junior branch of a German landed estate. Several members of the family lived in Russia. George Ludwig Prince of Schleswig-Holstein (died 1763), Emperor Peter III"s uncle
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