University of Hong Kong–Shenzhen Hospital

The University of Hong Kong–Shenzhen Hospital (HKU-SZH; Chinese: 香港大学深圳医院) is a teaching hospital of the University of Hong Kong in Futian, Shenzhen, Guangdong, China.[1]

University of Hong Kong–
Shenzhen Hospital
香港大学深圳医院
Map
University of Hong Kong–Shenzhen Hospital is located in Guangdong
University of Hong Kong–Shenzhen Hospital
University of Hong Kong–Shenzhen Hospital
Geography
LocationShenzhen, Guangdong, China
Coordinates22°31′28″N 113°59′35″E / 22.52444°N 113.99306°E / 22.52444; 113.99306
Organisation
Care systemPublic
TypeDistrict General, Teaching
Affiliated universityUniversity of Hong Kong
Services
Emergency departmentYes, Major Trauma Centre
Beds2000
History
Opened2012
Links
Websitewww.hku-szh.org
ListsHospitals in China
Map
Chinese name
Simplified Chinese香港大学深圳医院
Traditional Chinese香港大學深圳醫院
Transcriptions
Standard Mandarin
Hanyu PinyinXiānggǎng Dàxué Shēnzhèn Yīyuàn
Yue: Cantonese
Jyutpinghoeng1 gong2 daai6 hok6 sam1 zan3 ji1 jyun6*2

The 600-bed hospital is one of the two teaching hospitals of the University of Hong Kong. The Shenzhen municipal government constructed and provided funding for the facility.[2]

History

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University of Hong Kong–Shenzhen Hospital was opened in 2012. Its first head was Grace Tang Wai-king[note 1].[3] The Shenzhen municipal government spent 4 billion yuan (about $624 million U.S. dollars) constructing the hospital.[4] The Shenzhen Daily described it as the first "Hong Kong-style public hospital" in that city, and that residents "have shown great enthusiasm in" the hospital's introduction.[5]

The hospital did not accept hongbao (red packets filled with cash) from patients in exchange for preferential service to them, and has been more conservative in giving out medications and intravenous therapy. For these reasons some patients had filed complaints against the style of healthcare given at HKU-SZH. The Chinese government had fully subsidized HKU-SZH, but the hospital operated at heavy financial losses despite that.[4] By 2014 HKU and the Shenzhen government were disputing which party should cover the 200 million Hong Kong dollar advance for clinical management and supervision.[6] In 2014 the hospital received some subsidies, and at that time it began operating without a loss. By 2015 there had been steady increases in the numbers of patients.[4] In 2015 the head of the governing council of HKU stated that HKU-SZH is expected to repay the HK$200M advance by 2023.[7]

On 14 November 2016 Professor Lo Chung-mau was scheduled to become the head of HKU-SZH, replacing Grace Tang. He is a liver transplant expert, member of the HKU university council, and the head of surgery of HKU.[3] In October 2016 Lo stated that there will be a new pricing policy.[8] According to The Standard "[i]t is believed" that Lo is intended to establish an organ transplant programme at HKU-SZH.[3]

Notes

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  1. ^ traditional Chinese: 鄧惠瓊; simplified Chinese: 邓慧琼; Jyutping: dang6 wai6 king4; pinyin: Dèng Huìqióng

References

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  1. ^ "Contact Us." The University of Hong Kong-Shenzhen Hospital. Retrieved on November 26, 2016. "Address: The University of Hong Kong-Shenzhen Hospital, 1, Haiyuan 1st Road, Futian District, Shenzhen, Guangdong, P.R.C." - Chinese address: "联系地址:广东深圳市福田区海园一路(白石路与侨城东路交汇)香港大学深圳医院"
  2. ^ Lee, Ella (2010-03-22). "HKU Shenzhen Hospital shuns mainland habits". South China Morning Post. Retrieved 2011-11-26.
  3. ^ a b c "Lo in Shenzhen Hospital top job". The Standard. 2016-10-25. Retrieved 2016-11-27.
  4. ^ a b c Wang, Shirley S. (2015-09-11). "Hospital's Struggles Show Challenges for China Health-Care Reform". The Wall Street Journal. Archived from the original on 2016-11-27. Retrieved 2018-07-18.
  5. ^ "HK clinics unpopular in SZ". Shenzhen Daily. 2012-07-27. Retrieved 2017-09-13.
  6. ^ Nip, Amy (2014-06-26). "HKU's HK$200m bill for mainland hospital". South China Morning Post. Retrieved 2016-11-27. - print title: "HKU's HK$200m bill for mainland hospital"
  7. ^ Cheung, Elizabeth (2015-10-05). "Shenzhen hospital to pay University of Hong Kong advance by 2023". South China Morning Post. Retrieved 2016-11-27.
  8. ^ Cheung, Elizabeth (2016-10-31). "University of Hong Kong's Shenzhen hospital set for pricing revamp". South China Morning Post. Retrieved 2016-11-27.
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