Specialization Of Homerton University Hospital NHS Foundation Trust
Cardiology
Colon & Rectal Surgeon
Daibetes, Endocrinology
Dermatology
ENT
Gastro-enterology
Gynaecology
Hematologist
Maxillofacial Surgery
Neurologist
Ophthalmology
Orthopedics
Paediatrics
Pain Management
Plastic Surgery
Podiatry
Vascular Surgeon
About Homerton University Hospital NHS Foundation Trust
Homerton is based in the east London borough of Hackney.
We provide general hospital services to Hackney and the City of London and specialist care in obstetrics, neonatology, fetal medicine, laparoscopic surgery, fertility, bariatric surgery, obesity surgery and neurorehabilitation across east London and beyond.
We were one of the first 10 NHS foundation trusts in England.
Membership and Council of Governors
Find out more about our Council of Governors. They represent the members and partner organisations and work closely with the Board of Directors.
Homerton University Hospital NHS Foundation Trust celebrates its fifth birthday
Homerton was one of the original trusts to gain foundation trust status. A total of 20 trusts will be celebrating their fifth anniversary this year. There are now 115 foundation trusts which are widely considered to be the flagships of NHS patient care, delivering some of the best patient care in the country.
History Of Homerton University Hospital NHS Foundation Trust
A history of healthcare in Hackney and how Homerton was created.
Health in Hackney
Hackney was first recorded in 1198 and for 400 years remained as a farming community in Middlesex; districts we know today including Homerton, Dalston, Clapton and Shacklewell were hamlets in the parish of Hackney.
It quickly established itself as an area of diversity; as well as nonconformist worshipers in the 1600s and 1700s, there were a number of immigrants from Europe. The communities we know today can also trace their roots back to the 17th Century; Jewish people have lived here since 1684, there has been a Black presence since 1630 (although the afro-Caribbean community did not fully develop until the 1950s), and Asian nurses for British children have been staying in the area since the early 1900s. As you will see from the history of the hospitals in this area there had also been a strong German community from the 1800s.
Hackney’s first hospital was founded in 1280, called the Kingsland Leper Hospital (based on Kingsland Road). It was one of ten leper hospitals set up in London; it was eventually closed by St Bartholomew’s Hospital in 1760. Although the area was very diverse, in terms of healthcare Hackney conformed to the English system. By the 1800s there were two kinds of hospital in England: the voluntary hospitals, which were funded by donations from private sources who were then able nominate patients for treatment by writing letters of introductions; or the workhouse infirmaries, public fever and mental hospitals. All hospitals were used only by the poor; patients had a higher chance of recovery if they were nursed at home and so those who could afford to would pay for a nurse to tend to them there.
Hackney's hospitals
We realise that many of you may remember the 'old' hospitals in Hackney - St Leonards, St Matthews, the Mothers', Queen Elizabeth Hospital for Children, the German, the Eastern and Hackney.
In this section we look more closely at just four of them - those which closed at a similar time to Homerton; remembering though that all have contributed to Homerton becoming what it is today.