Goodmayes Hospital


Goodmayes Hospital is a mental health facility in Goodmayes in the London Borough of Redbridge. It is managed by the North East London NHS Foundation Trust.

History

The site selected had previously been occupied by Blue House Farm. The hospital, which was designed by Lewis Angell using a Compact Arrow layout and built by Leslie and Co, opened as the West Ham Borough Asylum in August 1901. It became West Ham Mental Hospital in 1918 and a major expansion of the hospital was completed in February 1934.
Dr James Harvey Cuthbert, who served as the hospital superintendent, was a pioneer of electric shock therapy in the late 1930s. The hospital, which was badly bombed during the Second World War, joined the National Health Service as Goodmayes Hospital in 1948. Part of the site was released in the early 1990s to allow the King George Hospital to be built.

Teaching

The hospital provides clinical placements in psychiatry for medical students from Barts and The London School of Medicine and Dentistry.

Transport

The hospital is served by London Buses route EL3. The nearest train stations are Goodmayes on the Great Eastern Main Line, with services provided by TfL Rail, and Newbury Park on the Central line.