Botkin hospital Mirgorodskaya 3 departments. Clinical Infectious Diseases Hospital named after

The clinical diagnostic laboratory of the Botkin Hospital is equipped with modern equipment that allows for comprehensive laboratory research. The laboratory equipment park is represented by biochemical and hematological analyzers, a flow cytometer, immunochemical and enzyme immunoassay analyzers, an automatic coagulometer, automatic systems for evaluating bacteriological cultures, blood cultivation, and a PCR diagnostics laboratory.

Every year, more than 3.3 million analyzes are performed in the divisions of the clinical diagnostic laboratory for all major types of research.

The CDL consists of 3 departments:

  • Department of planned laboratory diagnostics;
  • Department of emergency laboratory diagnostics;
  • bacteriological department.

The departments have 133 specialists, including 30 doctors.

Thanks to advanced equipment, the laboratory performs a wide range of research:

  • More than 30 parameters of biochemical studies;
  • General clinical blood analysis for 36 parameters, including reticulocytes and their additional characteristics;
  • Clinical analysis of urine, cerebrospinal fluid, feces, sputum, cytological studies (punctures, aspirates, exfoliative material);
  • More than 20 types of immunological studies, including infections, tumor markers, hormones, specific proteins;
  • A wide range of bacteriological studies, including the diagnosis of campylobacteriosis, helicobacteriosis, intestinal and vaginal dysbiosis.

The laboratory conducts daily quality control of performed studies using commercial control materials. Since 1997 KDL has been a permanent member of the Federal System of External Quality Assessment.

For 75 years, the CDL and the Department of Clinical Laboratory Diagnostics of the RMAPE have been working as a single educational and methodological complex for the training of specialists in clinical laboratory diagnostics. Clinical residents and interns of RMAPE are trained annually on the basis of CDL

"Thank you Doctor".

The desire to tell this story is driven by the horror of powerlessness. My mother was killed there. I know these people. And I can't do anything. I can't prove anything. But I know for sure that they have no evidence to the contrary either. They, as I understand it, have a system. The system of destruction of the people they sentenced. Maybe this information will help someone.

My mother has been sick for a long time. She learned to live fully, having a very serious illness. She had several blood transfusions (I don't know how many, I was a child then). Probably, then there was no necessary control over the quality of blood - she was infected with viral hepatitis. I want to emphasize that she is not to blame for this illness (it is the main one, recorded in the death certificate), the doctors are to blame. My mother had a gigantic will to live, you don't see her like that anymore. But she could no longer cope with the “specialists” of the Botkin hospital.
At some point, we had to go to this hospital. Very kind doctor Yu.M. said that now

To maintain vitality, we will need to go to this hospital about once every six months. And, at first, it was so - planned treatment about 1 time in six months. Then more often. I could not understand why with each of our new visits the doctor's attitude towards us becomes more alienated, more aggressive. Now I realized that it did not fit into the treatment methodology. According to this treatment, my mother should have left a long time ago, but she lived on and came again with the hope of being cured. It was infuriating.
I once wanted to talk to her during the reception hours. My terminally ill mother said, “Don't, don't go. Yu.M. very bad mood." Those, this doctor, clearly showed her bad mood to her sick, seriously ill. Once my mother taught me - there is no bad mood, there is a bad upbringing. In this case, we can add - this is not only education, it is a criminal attitude to one's duties.
And what relief was in her voice when, barely turning her head, she said through her teeth - “A complication of the underlying disease. Patient in intensive care. All questions go there. This is the answer to the only close relative of a doctor who has treated the patient for several years. Well, everything. I waited. Got rid of it.
The bleeding, due to which she ended up in intensive care, was provoked by a fall. She was sent to do an unnecessary X-ray of the head. I am a bedridden patient. One. Unaccompanied. You leave a man in a paid ward of a state hospital, and you find him only bruised. And no explanation. Yu.M. Bad mood. You can't go to them.

Next up is resuscitation. The story is separate and, perhaps, the main one. My mother was treated a lot. We saw resuscitation in different hospitals, we saw different doctors there. But there is no such horror anywhere. I believe that this is due to the large number of lonely, unprotected people going through this resuscitation. The specifics of the Botkin hospital.
At 10 am on Thursday, October 11, bleeding began. Mom called, said that she was being transferred to intensive care. Then the phone was taken away from her. For what reason? The person is conscious, why can't he communicate with his relatives? It is by no means the presence of thin electronics, the work of which the included phone can bring down, this is justified. Quite different. A person can report what is happening to him.
By the highest permission, I was admitted to the intensive care unit in the doctor's office 3 times.

1400 Thursday 11 October. The doctor invited me into the office. She said that her mother was in critical condition. She had a probe inserted through her nose to stop the bleeding. When asked how I can help, I answered that apart from care items (diapers, diapers, napkins), nothing is needed. Why? I consulted with doctors. There are many drugs that stop the blood, much better than prescribed by the CHI. They probably sentenced her right away.
-Let me look at her for a second.
-Not.
- She became more contagious than when she was in ward 8?
- I don't know - the order of the head physician.
Now I know that she was 6-7 meters away from me

11 00 Friday 12 October. A.V. explains that the condition is serious, but the chance to get out this time is 50%. It was this high percentage that became decisive when I took the risk of not taking her out of there as soon as I saw the “treatment” with my own eyes. Why did you have to lie. He knew what the next shift was. Mom was a sociable person. Some of her friends from the hospital are familiar with these names - they managed to survive. They cause nothing but a grimace of horror. It is unlikely that this is unknown to the head of the department. A very decent person who is trustworthy. Tell the truth and I'd take her immediately. The person would be surrounded by relatives.
In general, I believed these 50%.
By the way, the phones of the resuscitation staff work. And I got to talk to my mom. She is fully conscious.
“Don't worry, I'll get out.
How is the boy?
It is very cold in here".
She was really cold all the time. She even asked me to take our homemade warm blanket from the 8th department with me. Then I saw him in a sack in their pantry.
And then there was the next shift: A.E. and M.Z.

Today I will show you one of the largest hospitals in the country. Yes, and with history. The Alexander barracks hospital appeared in St. Petersburg in 1882, a little later it was named after Sergei Petrovich Botkin. Since 1972, one of the first intensive care units for infectious patients in the country began to operate at the Botkin Hospital. And the hospital celebrated its 120th anniversary as the country's largest infectious diseases hospital with 1,210 beds, which annually treated up to 35,000 patients.

Since 2017, half of the complex has moved to a new site on Piskarevsky Prospekt, but four buildings with 525 beds continue to operate on Mirgorodskaya Street (that is, almost half of all the beds of the Botkin Hospital). This part of the hospital is located almost in the very center of St. Petersburg (you can walk to the Moscow railway station in less than 15 minutes).

I'll start with a little impression from a patient who posted his post yesterday:

“I am now in the largest infectious diseases hospital in the Russian Federation - the Botkin Hospital.<…>The condition of the box where they put me, and this is the infectious diseases department, where there are 5 beds. The beds are sagging and my back hurts after the first night. Toilet, bathroom, corridors. All departments go to the dining room together, all infections at one breakfast. I am in shock, I am discharged the next day after arrival.”

And here all the scenery for some horror movie about zombies is definitely ready - it will be possible to save money on computer graphics.


Photo: vk.com / group

Toilet. Everything here is just terrible.

Photo: vk.com / group Accident and emergency | St. Petersburg | Peter Online | St. Petersburg

Ward.

Photo: vk.com / group Accident and emergency | St. Petersburg | Peter Online | St. Petersburg

Of course, this indignation is far from isolated, in St. Petersburg the hospital has long been called the "Botkin Barracks" (this name did not have a negative context when it was created). Here is a remarkable review of the correspondent of the St. Petersburg TV channel:

On the Internet, you can easily find a lot of information about the hospital, as well as photos from the inside. I want to show you the territory. Outside, believe me, the situation will not please you either. There are a lot of problems here.

1. The main entrance looks far from the best. However, in this building at least new windows (and even then not everywhere).

2. Current vacancies.

3. The other entrance is no longer used, and indeed the arch is completely falling apart here.

4. Reception department.

If for a second the thought “What’s wrong here?” occurred to you, then here’s the view from the back. Some asshole also decided to put his trough in this mud. Is anyone else surprised that Russian cities are covered in dust and dirt?

5. Between the buildings, the roads are in approximately the same condition.

6. In some places, asphalt also ends.

7. This is still the territory of the largest infectious diseases hospital in Russia.

8. Here, I think, it is appropriate to put a link for you to the news about the restoration of Palmyra by Russian specialists, or to how Russia raised money for the restoration of Notre Dame.

9. After all, one can sit on such a bench and rejoice that we have helped the fraternal Syrian people in restoring a cultural monument.

11. Some of the hulls have been decommissioned. Now they are simply falling apart, although outwardly they still remain pleasing to the eye.

12. There are also working cases, but they do not look better.

13. Here in this building is the Department of Prevention and Medical Examinations.

14. The eternal misfortune of Russia - ads "on the leaves."

15. Local navigation.

16. The building of the consultative and diagnostic clinic and administration.

17. Inside the stairs to hell.

18. The clinic is decorated by doctors for the New Year.

19. If you nevertheless left the territory of the hospital, then do not flatter yourself - in the direction of the metro you will have to go along the fence. Not even a fence, but fences - they are everywhere here (they even enclose the fate of the lawn from all sides).

Basically, of course, the reaction of an ordinary person to all this is fucked up! And this is periodically recognized by the doctors themselves, and the city authorities of St. Petersburg, and residents. However, the horror is also in the fact that there are those who believe that all this is normal for Russia. The reasons for thinking this way can be very different: “it’s even worse in the regions”, “medicine is free”, etc.

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