Cama Hospital
Cama Hospital | |
---|---|
Geography | |
Location | Mumbai, Maharashtra, India |
Coordinates | 18°56′32″N 72°49′55″E / 18.942163°N 72.832079°E |
Services | |
Beds | 367 |
History | |
Opened | 30 July 1886 |
Links | |
Lists | Hospitals in India |
The Cama & Albless Hospital (originally just Cama Hospital) is a hospital for women and children in the city of Mumbai, India, with 367 beds.[1]
History
This section needs expansion. You can help by adding to it. (October 2022) |
The foundation stone was laid by H.R.H. the Duke of Connaught on 22 November 1883 and the building formally opened on 30 July 1886. The building was designed in Medieval Gothic style by Khan Bahadoor Muncherjee Cowasjee Murzban. The building is made from stone obtained from Porbander. Pestonjee Hormusjee Cama, is a Parsi philanthropist who contributed ₹100,000 (~₹43 crore in 2020) to its construction.[2] The staffing was provided through the Medical Women for India Fund.[3] The Cama Hospital later employed Edith Pechey, one of the original cohort of female medical students at the University of Edinburgh (1869).
The hospital was one of the main targets during the 2008 Mumbai attacks.
References
- ^ Mishra, Lata (16 January 2019). "132-yr-old Cama Hospital gets Rs 3-crore Tata grant". Mumbai Mirror. Retrieved 1 March 2022.
- ^ Xenophon (1888). "Pestonjee Cama Hospital, Bombay". Indian Engineering: 432.
- ^ Kittredge, George (1889). A short history of the "Medical Women for India" Fund of Bombay. Bombay: Education Society's Press. pp. 24–29.
External links
- Cama and Albless Hospital - listing at the India Education Network
- Cama & Albless Hospital, Mumbai
- Cama Albless Hospital (Dhobi Talao; 367 beds - Municipal hospitals in Mumbai)
- Nitin Yeshwantrao and Hemali Chhapia, "Panic-stricken patients walk out of Cama hospital", Times of India, 28 November 2008.
- Tata donation to the hospital