Rotunda Hospital

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Template:Use dmy dates Script error: No such module "For". Script error: No such module "Type in location".Script error: No such module "Infobox".Template:Template otherScript error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters". The Rotunda Hospital (Template:Langx;[1] legally the Hospital for the Relief of Poor Lying-in Women, Dublin)[2] is a maternity hospital on Parnell Street in Dublin, Ireland, now managed by RCSI Hospitals.[3] The Rotunda entertainment buildings in Parnell Square are no longer part of the hospital complex.

History

File:Views of the most remarkable public buildings, monuments and other edifices in the city of Dublin (1780) (14772921285).jpg
The Rotunda Hospital in 1780
File:Back of the Rotunda Hospital in Dublin.jpg
Back of the hospital, showing tennis courts. ca. 1890s
File:Rotunda Hospital sign.jpg
Sign on the Rotunda hospital, with a neon light image of a stork

The hospital was founded by Bartholomew Mosse, a surgeon and midwife who was appalled at the conditions that pregnant women had to endure, in George's Lane in March 1745.[4] It was granted by royal charter on 2 December 1756 by King George II.[5] Lying-in is an archaic term for childbirth (referring to the month-long bed rest prescribed for postpartum confinement).[6] The venture was very successful and Mosse raised money through concerts, exhibitions and even a lottery to establish larger premises.[7]

The hospital moved to its current premises in 1757, designed by Richard Cassels,[8] where it became known as "The New Lying-In Hospital".[9] The Church of Ireland Chapel was opened in 1762.[10] Open to the public, it provided a healthy income to the hospital annually, Dr. Mosse successfully encouraging wealthy Protestant Dubliners to attend service there.[11][12]

Records indicate that around 1781, "when the hospital was imperfectly ventilated, every sixth child died within nine days after birth, of convulsive disease; and that after means of thorough ventilation had been adopted, the mortality of infants, within the same, in five succeeding years, was reduced to one in twenty".[13] This issue was not limited to the Lying-In-Hospital. In that era, ventilation improvement was a general issue in patient care,[14] along with other issues of sanitation and hygiene, and the conditions in which surgeons such as Robert Liston in Britain and elsewhere, had to operate.[15][16] Florence Nightingale famously worked on the design of safe and healthy hospitals.[14]

The first caesarean section in Ireland was undertaken at the hospital in 1889.[17]

By 1993, the hospital was still functioning as a maternity hospital.Template:Sfn

Rotunda

The eponymous Rotunda, designed by James Ensor,[8] was completed just in time for a reception hosted by James FitzGerald, Marquess of Kildare in October 1767.[18] The extensive Rotunda Rooms, designed by Richard Johnston and built adjacent to the rotunda, were completed in 1791.[19] By the early 19th century the hospital had become known as the Rotunda Hospital, after its most prominent architectural feature.[20] The Rotunda became a theatre, where the Irish Volunteers' first public meeting was held in 1913, and later housed the Ambassador Cinema. The Rotunda Rooms now house the Gate Theatre.[21]

Architecture

Patrick Wyse Jackson, curator of the Geological Museum in Trinity College, assessed the building in 1993 as part of his book "The Building Stones of Dublin: A Walking Guide" with the following remarks:

"The walls of the current building dating from 1757 are faced with Leinster granite and Kilgobbin granite... The former building was executed in Portland stone and Leinster granite, to which a sculptured frieze of ox heads and other panels were added. These are interesting as they are made of Coade stone, a fashionable artificial stone used widely in the late 1700s."Template:Sfn The Rotunda or "round room", and the buildings now occupied by the Gate Theatre were later additions.Template:Sfn

Services

The Rotunda Hospital, as both a maternity hospital and also as a training centre (affiliated with Trinity College Dublin)[22] is notable for having provided continuous service to mothers and babies since inception, making it the oldest continuously operating maternity hospital in the world.[23] In 2025, the total number of babies born at the hospital increased to more than 900,000 since it opened its doors. [24]

Criticism

In 2000 the Rotunda Hospital was one of two Dublin maternity hospitals found to have illegally retained organ tissue from babies without parental consent. The tissue removed in post-mortem examinations was retained for some years. The Rotunda hospital admitted that permission should have been sought for this process to be allowed to take place.[25]

A medical negligence award was approved in 2020 for a young boy who developed cerebral palsy as a result of complications with his delivery at the hospital in 2004.[26]

See also

References

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  7. Kirkpatrick, p. 25
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  9. Kirkpatrick, p. 35
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  13. Script error: No such module "citation/CS1". Full text at Internet Archive (archive.org).
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  15. Script error: No such module "citation/CS1". p.43
  16. Script error: No such module "Citation/CS1". in Gordon, R. (1983), p.147.
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  18. Kirkpatrick, p. 68
  19. Kirkpatrick, p. 104
  20. Kirkpatrick, p. 198
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Sources

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External links

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