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“This is a critical development as we work to provide our staff and physicians with access to the latest technology so that they can expand their research and educational opportunities, ensuring that our patients have access to the best patient care based on the latest research and best practice.” - Joanna Pawlyshyn RAH Chief Operating Officer. |
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The Royal Alexandra Hospital’s Cardiac Sciences Program is the largest center providing adult non-surgical cardiology services within the Capital Health Region, and supports Central and Northern Alberta as well as neighboring Provinces and Territories. With the opening of the Robbins Pavilion in 2008, the Cardiac Service program the new Centre for Cardiac Services, which will complement the Mazankowski Alberta Heart Institute, will allow the cardiac team at the Royal Alex to expand their innovative work in the provision of non-surgical cardiac care. Currently The Cardiac Service program consists of a Coronary Care Unit, an Inpatient Cardiology Ward, two Cardiac Catheterization Laboratories with Recovery Room and numerous outpatient clinic and diagnostic services.
RAH focuses on innovation in non-surgical solutionsAs one of the seven hospitals providing cardiac care in Capital Health, the Royal Alexandra Hospital (RAH) plays a vital role in providing patients with some of Canada's best cardiac services. The RAH is unique in Canada in the volume of angioplasty (non-surgical opening of blocked blood vessels) procedures completed without back-up surgery on site. The regional cardiac program in Capital Health provides surgical back-up when needed, just 10 minutes away at the University of Alberta Hospital. In-patients from the Northwest Territories and central and northern Alberta are routinely transferred directly to the RAH and the UAH for non-surgical treatment. This has involved close coordination between cardiologists at both sites and with physicians in rural communities. In 1981, the RAH became the first hospital in Alberta to perform coronary interventions. During the past 10 years, about 6,000 patients have benefited from this procedure with a success rate of 95 per cent and a complication rate of only 1.45 per cent. Of 2,000 patients who underwent coronary interventions during the last two years, the success rate was 97.6 per cent and no patient required emergency bypass due to failure of these procedures. |
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