Next Episode of Hospital is
not planed. TV Show was canceled.
Filmed over six weeks during the past three months, Hospital is the story of the NHS in unprecedented times.Edited and broadcast within weeks of filming, this timely six part series for BBC Two will capture the day-to-day realities facing the NHS right now.With exceptional access to one of the UK's biggest and busiest NHS Trusts, Hospital will bring audiences intensely close to the issues and challenges that continually dominate the headlines.Each episode will show with exceptional candour the ever-increasing demands on the NHS's services, from intricate and morally complex medical ethics to health tourism; from A&E overcrowding to cancelled operations.Shown from multiple perspectives and for the first time, the audience will see the extraordinary dilemmas and decision-making which happen every day for the consultants, surgeons and bed managers, all of which have profound consequences for patients and treatments.Crews shot across five hospitals in Imperial College Healthcare Trust London to understand the complex decision making and the impact each one can have, following the key decision makers as they attempt to care for nearly 20,000 people every week. But standing in their way are limited resources, an increasing number of emergency patients and a clock that never stops ticking. Produced in partnership with The Open University.
Floods and an electrical fault disrupt A&E and operating theatres in the crumbling Royal.
This episode follows a patient who has been in intensive care for 12 months, and another ready for rehab for the past two.
A consultant recruitment crisis threatens care at Liverpool Women's Hospital. Doctors care for a pregnant mother with cancer.
Alder Hey closes its critical care unit to new admissions. A five-year-old returns three times for her cancelled heart operation.
Three transplants are due at the Royal Liverpool University Hospital. At the Women's Hospital, a pregnant mum faces a heart-wrenching decision
A teenager self-funds cutting-edge surgery for his cerebral palsy. Surgeons go to appeal to fund an 81-year-old's surgery and use new DNA tumour profiling to try to save a baby.
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