Wikipedia

Mackay Memorial Hospital

Mackay Memorial Hospital
馬偕紀念醫院
Mackay Memorial Hospital Taipei 20131209.JPG
Geography
LocationZhongshan, Taipei, Taiwan
Coordinates25°03′31″N 121°31′21″E / 25.058737°N 121.522371°E
Organisation
TypeGeneral
Affiliated universityPresbyterian Church in Taiwan
Services
Beds1,200 (Taipei Main Hospital)
History
Opened1880
Links
Websitemmh.org.tw
ListsHospitals in Taiwan

Mackay Memorial Hospital (Chinese: 馬偕紀念醫院; pinyin: Mǎjiē Jìniàn Yīyuàn), established on 26 December 1912, is one of the largest medical centers in Taiwan. It is a private Christian hospital in Zhongshan District, Taipei, Taiwan, mostly associated with George Leslie Mackay, the first modern missionary to northern Taiwan. The hospital is deeply rooted in the Presbyterian tradition and under the spiritual guidance of the Presbyterian Church in Taiwan.

History

The original Mackay Hospital — named Mackay Clinic — was built by Mackay in Tamsui in 1880 and named to commemorate George Leslie Mackay, whose widow donated the funds.[1] At that time, the Mackay Clinic was the first western medical institution in northern Taiwan. It was temporarily closed in 1901 at the death of Mackay.[2]

Mackay Hospital was reopened in 1906. In 1912, it was relocated from Tamsui to Taipei and renamed Mackay Memorial Hospital.[3] Its logo bears the date of the original foundation: 1880.

In 1967, the hospital built the first intensive care unit in Taiwan and, two years later, the first suicide prevention center in Southeast Asia. In 1994, it established the first demonstration burn ward in Taiwan.[4]

Location

Taipei

The hospital is accessible via Taipei Metro's Taipei Metro Line R.svg Shuanglian Station.

Tamsui

Taipei Metro's Taipei Metro Line R.svg Zhuwei Station

Hsinchu

Taitung

See also

  • Healthcare in Taiwan
  • President Tsai Ing-wen, born at the hospital

References

  1. ^ Mackay, George L. (1896). From Far Formosa: the island, its people and missions. New York: F. H. Revell Co. p. 316.
  2. ^ Han Cheung (25 December 2016). "Taiwan in Time: Healing and preaching". Taipei Times. Retrieved 25 December 2016.
  3. ^ "A Chronicle of Events". Mackay Memorial Hospital. Retrieved 25 December 2016.
  4. ^ "Surgeons for Smiles". Taiwan Today. 1 May 2005. Retrieved 25 December 2016.
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