From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Boston Lying-In Hospital building, part of Brigham and Women's
Hospital but separate from BWH main building, view from Longwood
Avenue.
Brigham and Women's Hospital (BWH) is the
largest hospital of Longwood Medical and
Academic Area, Boston, Massachusetts and
is directly adjacent to Harvard Medical School of which
it is the second largest teaching affiliate. With Massachusetts General
Hospital, Harvard Medical School's largest teaching affiliate,
it is one of the two founding members of Partners
HealthCare, the largest healthcare provider in
Massachusetts.
Brigham and Women's is a partner in the Dana-Farber/Harvard
Cancer Center, which has 13 separate cancer treatment centers.
Generally, outpatient care for cancer and related diseases takes
place at the Dana-Farber Cancer Institute and inpatient care takes
place at BWH, with the two facilities connected by bridges. BWH
also treats patients at Faulkner Hospital, a community teaching
hospital located in the Jamaica Plain section of Boston, and at
Brigham and Women's/Mass General Health Care Center at Foxborough,
in Foxborough, Massachusetts.
BWH is part of the consortium of hospitals which operates Boston
MedFlight, which added a Sikorsky S-76 C++ twin engine
helicopter to its fleet in 2009. The Sikorsky has night vision
goggle capability and a traffic collision avoidance system, travels
up to 175 miles per hour, and is big enough to transport two
patients and a full MedFlight crew.
Construction was recently completed on the Carl J. and Ruth
Shapiro Cardiovascular Center, which is connected to Brigham and
Women's main building with a bridge.[1]
Over the last ten years, BWH has been one of the top two largest
non-university recipients of research funding from the National Institutes of
Health.[2] In
2008, the hospital received a total of $441 million in research
funding from all sources. The BWH Biomedical Research Institute
(BRI), which oversees the hospital's research, has a staff of more
than 3,200 researchers.
As of 2008, U.S. News & World
Report rankings place BWH overall as the 8th-best hospital
in the United States.[3] 2008
marks the 17th consecutive year that BWH has been on U.S. News
& World Report Honor Roll (ranked in the top ten overall),
making it the only hosptial to be on the Honor Roll every year. For
the following specialties BWH received rankings in the top 10 by
the U.S. News and World Report[4]:
History
Brigham and Women's represents the 1980 merger of three
Harvard-affiliated Boston hospitals:
- Peter Bent Brigham Hospital established in
1913
- Robert Breck Brigham Hospital established in
1914
- Boston Hospital for Women established in 1966
as a merger of:
-
- Boston Lying-In Hospital established in 1832
as one of America’s first maternity hospitals
- Free Hospital for Women established in
1875
Some milestones in the history of BWH and its predecessor
institutions include the following:
- 1847 Anesthesia is
administered for the first time in childbirth (Boston Lying-In
Hospital)
- 1877 Boston restaurateur and investor Peter Bent Brigham dies,
leaving a $5.3 million bequest to build a hospital 25 years after
his death.[5][6]
- 1913 Harvey
Cushing is named the surgeon-in-chief at the newly opened Peter
Bent Brigham Hospital and remains in this position for two decades;
He made several key discoveries relating to neurosurgery and endocrinology.[5]
- In 1923 Dr. Elliot Cutler of the Peter Bent Brigham
Hospital performed the world’s first successful heart valve
surgery.[5] The
patient was a 12-year-old girl with rheumatic mitral stenosis who underwent mitral
valve repair.
- 1926 Drs. William Murphy, George Whipple
and George Minot
discover that liver extracts cure pernicious anemia, previously a
rapidly fatal illness. In 1934, they share the Nobel Prize for this
work (Peter Bent Brigham Hospital).
- 1931 Harvey Cushing performs his 2000th brain tumor
operation.[5]
- 1932 Heart surgeon Elliot Cutler succeeds Harvey Cushing as
chief of surgery at Peter Bent Brigham Hospital.[5]
- Soma Weiss was
named the physician-in-chief of Peter Bent Brigham Hospital in
1939. He is noted for his discovery of esophageal lacerations with
alcoholics, which was later termed as Mallory-Weiss syndrome.
- 1947 An early form of a kidney dialysis machine is developed at Peter Bent
Brigham Hospital.[5]
- 1948 Francis Moore succeeds Elliot Cutler as chief of surgery
at Peter Bent Brigham Hospital. Moore was the author of the
textbook The Metabolic Response to Surgery and a pioneer
in studying metabolic problems related to surgery.[5]
- 1948 Carol Walter pioneers the use of plastic bags in place of
breakable glass bottles for blood bank storage.[5]
- 1949 Cortisone, a steroid treatment administered
for the first time to patients with rheumatoid arthritis (Robert Breck
Brigham Hospital)
- 1949 Dr. Carl Walter invents and perfects a way to collect,
store and transfuse blood - developing the world’s first blood bank (Peter Bent
Brigham Hospital).
- In 1954, the first successful human organ transplant, a kidney
transplanted from one identical twin to another, was accomplished
at the Peter Bent Brigham Hospital. Joseph Murray, MD, received the Nobel Prize in 1990 for
this work and the subsequent development of immunosuppressive
drugs.[5]
- 1962 DC cardioversion is
used for the first time to restore normal rhythm to a heart in atrial fibrillation (Peter Bent
Brigham Hospital).
- 1976 Vascular surgeon John Mannick succeeds Francis Moore as
chief of surgery at Peter Bent Brigham Hospital.[5]
- 1980 The three hospitals merge to form Brigham and Women’s
Hospital.[5]
- 1984 The first heart transplant in New England is performed at
BWH.[5]
- 1989 Through the Physicians Heart Study is the first to prove
aspirin could prevent a first heart attack (BWH).
- 1990 BWH surgeon Joseph Murray receives the Nobel Prize.[5]
- 1994 BWH unveils the world's first Intra-Operative Magnetic
Resonance Imaging System for neurosurgery, specifically brain tumor craniotomy.
- 1994 Michael Zinner succeeds John Mannick as chief of surgery
at BWH.[5]
- 2000 The hospital performs the world's first quadruple
transplant, harvesting four organs from a single donor - a kidney,
two lungs and a heart - and transplanting them to four
patients.
- 2004 BWH becomes the first hospital to implement a complet
Electronic Medication Administration System, electronically linking
physicians writing prescriptions, pharmacists reviewing orders, and
nurses administering them.
- 2006 BWH becomes the first hospital in New England to perform a
robotic-assisted radical hysterectomy. In 2007, New England's first
robotic-assisted laparoscopic tubal sterilization reversal is
performed at BWH.
- 2009 On April 9, 2009, a BWH surgical team, led by Bohdan
Pomahac, M.D., performed the first face transplant in New England,
the second in the United States, and the seventh in the world.
References
- ^
BWH Shapiro Center
- ^
B&W Research
Statistics
- ^
"America's Best Hospitals
2008". U.S.News
& World Report. 2008-07-10. http://health.usnews.com/articles/health/best-hospitals/2008/07/10/best-hospitals-honor-roll.html.
- ^
"America's Best Hospitals
2008: Brigham and Women's Hospital, Boston". U.S.News
& World Report. 2008-07-10. http://www.usnews.com/listings/hospitals/6140215.
- ^ a
b
c
d
e
f
g
h
i
j
k
l
m
n
Ferzoco,
Stephen J.; Zinner, Michael J. (2005), "A Brief Surgical History of
the Peter Bent Brigham Hospital", Archives of Surgery
140 (4), http://archsurg.ama-assn.org/cgi/content/full/140/4/326
.
- ^
"To Build $5,000,000 Hospital; Heirs of
Peter Bent Brigham Fail to Block His Plans", New York Times, August 7,
1911
.
External
links