This article is about the Royal Children's Hospital in Melbourne, Australia. For other similarly named hospitals, see Children's Hospital (disambiguation).
The Royal Children's Hospital (RCH), colloquially referred to as the Royal Children's, is a major children's hospital in Parkville, a suburb of Melbourne, Victoria, Australia. Regarded as one of the great Children's hospitals globally, the hospital and its facilities are internationally recognised as a “leading centre for paediatrics”.[3] The hospital serves the entire states of Victoria, and Tasmania, as well as southern New South Wales and parts of South Australia. Patients from countries with a Reciprocal Health Agreement with Australia may be treated at the hospital, with seldom cases of overseas children being treated at the hospital.
As a major specialist paediatric hospital in Victoria, the Royal Children's Hospital provides a full range of clinical services, tertiary care, as well as health promotion and prevention programs for children and young people.[4]
The hospital is the designated statewide major trauma centre for paediatrics in Victoria and a Nationally Funded Centre for cardiac and liver transplantation.
Its campus partners are the Murdoch Children's Research Institute and The University of Melbourne Department of Paediatrics, which are based onsite at the hospital.
The hospital is surrounded by the parkland of Royal Park, with views of trees and much natural light.
History
Establishment and early years
The hospital was established in 1870,[5] founded by doctors John Singleton and William Smith, in response to their serious concerns about infant mortality in the fledgling city of Melbourne. The original "Free Hospital for Sick Children" was set up in a small house at 39 Stephen Street (now 49 Exhibition Street) and treated more than 1,000 children in its first year of operation.[6]
Unusually for the time, the hospital's committee of management was dominated by women from the outset. Frances Perry was elected as the inaugural president of the committee of management, although she was unsuccessful in imposing a Protestant religious ethos on the hospital. Artist Elizabeth Testar was another prominent member of the first committee.[7] In its earliest years, the hospital relied extensively on charitable donations with little government support available.[8] The management committee influenced patient admissions, often turning away children from wealthier families who they believed could afford private care.[7]
Carlton: 1876–1963
In 1876, the hospital purchased a large mansion in Carlton previously owned by Redmond Barry for £10,000 (equivalent to $1,600,000 in 2022).[9] The hospital's premises at Carlton continued to expand rapidly until the 1920s, when the need for a larger campus and purpose-built hospital became apparent.[10]
William Snowball was an influential paediatrician at the hospital from 1878 until his death in 1902, working to "improve accommodation and hygiene conditions for children in medical care, training structures for nursing staff, and research into diseases afflicting his patients".[11]Sarah Anne Bishop served as the hospital's nursing matron around the same time period, overseeing a tenfold increase in the number of nursing staff, improvements for staff and patients, and the establishment of the hospital's nursing training school.[12] In 1898, Ethel Cowan became the first woman appointed as a resident doctor at the hospital.[9]
The RCH Auxiliary movement was established by Mary Guthrie in 1922 to coordinate volunteering and fundraising efforts at the hospital.[13]Ella Latham, former president of a suburban auxiliary, served as president of the RCH committee of management from 1933 to 1954. In conjunction with medical director Vernon Collins and lady superintendent Lucy de Neeve, she oversaw the transition of the hospital "from a charity hospital to an institution that provided medical services of the highest quality, education and training facilities for staff, a research organization in both curative and preventive medicine, and a link with the university".[14]
Move to Parkville and further expansion: 1963–present
In 2005, the Victoria State Government announced plans to build a brand new 340 bed home for RCH adjacent to the existing site.[15] The winning bid of the redevelopment was led by Babcock & Brown with architects Billard Leece Partnership and Bates Smart Architects. HKS Inc. Architects of Dallas, Texas provided Paediatric Design and Planning Services and consulting engineers Norman Disney & Young. Work commenced on the site in late 2007, and was completed in late 2011, opened by Her Majesty Queen Elizabeth II on her Royal Tour.[16] Patients were moved into the new hospital in November 2011.[17] The project won the 2012 Melbourne Prize and the Victorian Architecture Medal.
After the move to new facility, demolition of the old site was completed by December 2012. Much of the old site was turned back into parkland, creating a new gateway to Royal Park.[18] Landscaping of the park was complete by 2015.
Good Friday Appeal
The Good Friday Appeal is held annually to raise money for the hospital. It has been broadcast on the Seven TV network for 52 years.
The goal of the Appeal is to ensure that children with life-threatening illnesses receive the best possible medical and clinical care.[19]
The 2009 Appeal raised $13,862,734.[20] The 2010 Appeal raised $14,462,000.[21] The 2011 Appeal raised $15,156,000. The 2012 Appeal raised $15,820,640. The 2013 appeal raised $16,405,534.65.[22] The 2016 Appeal, raised $17,445,624.[23] The 2017 Appeal, raised $17,605,662.[24]
A new record was set in 2018, with the appeal raising $18,043,251.[25]
Centre for Adolescent Health, Gender Service
The RCH Centre for Adolescent Health, Gender Service provides a multidisciplinary approach to the assessment, care and treatment of gender dysphoria[26] for children aged 3 to 17 years.[27][28] In 2003 it received 1 referral,[29] increasing to 7 referrals in 2007. In 2015 it was expected that there would be more than 150 referrals, with a one-year waiting list. The Andrews government said it will spend an extra $6 million over four years to reduce waiting times.[30][31] During 2016 the gender clinic is expecting to receive at least 250 referrals.[32]
RCH awards
Elizabeth Turner medal
Each year since 2002, the Elizabeth Turner Medal has been awarded to senior medical or dental practitioners at the RCH who have consistently shown excellence in clinical care over an extended period of time. It is the highest honour of peer recognition at the hospital.[33]
The medal was named in honour of Elizabeth Kathleen TurnerAO (1914-1999) who was a Paediatrician at the hospital from 1942 until 1980, and was the Medical Superintendent from 1943 until 1946. She was the first doctor in Australia to administer penicillin. The medal was named in her honour to acknowledge her devotion to the care of her patients.[33]
On the 150th anniversary of the hospital the medical staff association established the Barnes-Hutson medal to acknowledge outstanding contributions to the fabric of the hospital.[33]
The medal is named in honour of Graeme Barnes (Gastroenterology) and John Hutson (General Surgery and Urology) in acknowledgment of their all-round contribution to clinical practice, research, education, and mentorship.[33]
The inaugural award was presented to Gastroenterologist Winita Hardikar in 2021, Community paediatrician Jill Sewell received the award in 2022, and Gastroenterologist Prof Julie Bines received the award in 2023.[33]
Arms
Coat of arms of Royal Children's Hospital
Notes
Granted 5 May 1966
Crest
On a wreath Argent Gules and Azure on water barry wavy Argent and Azure an Australian Pelican naiant Proper.
Escutcheon
Per chevron Argent and Azure in chief two Rods of Aesculapius erect Proper the serpents respectant Vert in base a representation of the Constellation of the Southern Cross with five mullets Argent on a chief Gules a lion passant Or.
Supporters
On the dexter side a boy Proper vested in a short tunic Argent edged at the neck and sleeves and pendent from a cincture a purse Or shoes Vert and on the sinister side a girl Proper vested in a long sleeveless dress edged at the neck and hem and cinctured Or shoes Vert.