Bellevue Hospital, Jamaica

Coordinates: 17°58′12″N 76°46′20″W / 17.9700943399404°N 76.77214436837086°W / 17.9700943399404; -76.77214436837086
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The Bellevue Hospital is a psychiatric hospital in Jamaica, established with its current name in 1946, previously named the Jamaica Mental Hospital in 1938, and prior to that existed as the Jamaica Lunatic Asylum since 1861.[1]

The hospital was established as a result of a petition by physician Louis Quier Bowerbank.[2]

During the early 1970s, psychiatrist Aggrey Burke conducted studies on the mental health of repatriates at the hospital, noting that a significant number of admissions were repatriates from England.[3]

References[edit]

  1. ^ Online, Gleaner. "Brief History". Bellevue Hospital. Retrieved 2020-07-04.
  2. ^ John S. R. Golding (1994). "4. Early Jamaican Healthcare". Ascent to Mona as Illustrated by a Short History of Jamaican Medical Care: With an Account of the Beginning of the Faculty of Medicine, University of the West Indies. Canoe Press. p. 44. ISBN 976-8125-06-3.
  3. ^ Bailkin, Jordanna (2012). "1. The birth of the migrant; pathology and postwar mobility". Afterlife of Empire. University of California Press. p. 42. ISBN 978-0-520-28947-5.

External links[edit]

17°58′12″N 76°46′20″W / 17.9700943399404°N 76.77214436837086°W / 17.9700943399404; -76.77214436837086