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Queen Elizabeth II Medical Centre

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The Queen Elizabeth II Medical Centre (QEIIMC), commonly known as just QEII, is a medical campus in Perth, Western Australia, situated in the suburb of Nedlands directly adjacent to Kings Park. It contains Sir Charles Gairdner Hospital, the Perth Children's Hospital, the Harry Perkins Institute of Medical Research, and various smaller facilities.

The current QEII site was bought by the state government in 1910, and in 1922 a 999-year lease was granted to the University of Western Australia (UWA). The land remained largely undeveloped, so in 1953 the land was designated for the construction of a new medical centre with a teaching hospital at its core. The site was originally known as the Perth Medical Centre, but changed its name in 1977 to commemorate the Silver Jubilee of Elizabeth II. A 1966 act of parliament created a separate trust to manage the land, with UWA receiving representation on the board.[1]

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Transcription

It's my pleasure to invite the Prime Minister, the honourable Tony Abbott, to speak on behalf of the Commonwealth Government, to receive the symbolic keys, and to formally open the building. Prime Minister. Prime Minister, to commemorate the Commonwealth's wonder contribution to this building and to our other building and to also recognise you're role in opening this building, I'm very pleased to hand you this symbolic key to the Harry Perkins Institute building. Well ladies and gentlemen it is a real honor to be here today. It's an honor to be in the presence of the Governor, the Deputy Premier, the Lord Mayor ministers Dutton, Cormann, so many people who have made a magnificent contribution to this building. when I became the Health Minister back in 2003 it was not a position that I'd ever coveted, ever craved, ever asked for. But it was in some ways the most satisfying four years of my public life because the great thing about the health sector is that everyone is in it for the right reasons. They're not there for money, they're not there for preference, for advancement. They are there because they want to work for the betterment of mankind... and you do work for the betterment of mankind, particularly those who are involved in health and medical research. Almost nothing changes our world like health and medical research. If we think back to our great-grandparents' times, they were lucky to live to be fifty or sixty. Today we can expect to live to be eighty or ninety and that change, that extraordinary opening of the world to all of this has been a function of advances in heath treatment. It's been due in large measure to the work of health and medical researchers such as the people whose work we honour today, the people who will be housed in this magnificent building behind us. And can I say that we here in Australia are very very good at health and medical research. Howard Florey the inventor of penicillin has probably been the Australian who had most impact on the wider world. We've had a cavalcade, particularly in recent times, of internationally recognised health and medical researchers. Eight of Australia's 15 Nobel Prize winners have been in health and medical research and obviously I acknowledge and recognise and honour Professor Barry Marshall here with us today from the University of Western Australia. It's very important to this government as it's been very important to all governments that we continue to do what we can in health and medical research. I can assure everyone here today that having been a Health Minister for medical research I am determined to be a Prime Minister for medical research in the months and years to come. It's a thrill to think that the meeting that I had with Professor Peter Klinken all those years ago has borne fruit in this way. I'm honoured, Peter, to to be here with you today on your last day as director this Institute. I'm please to be with Peter Leedman on his first day as director of this research institute. But most of all I want to acknowledge everyone who has made today possible. The professors of course the researchers of course but all the unsung people that made it possible - the builders, the tradesman, the craftsman... everyone connected with Doric Constructions led by Harry Xydas. They've all done such a magnificent job It's nice to have the Hallelujah Chorus over there. Well may they do their bit to commemorate today because I am confident that our world our country, our state, will be so much better in the years and decades and centuries to come, because the work that will be done in this building behind us. Thank you Prime Minister. We'd now ask you to unveil the plaque to commemorate the official opening on the Harry Perkins Institute for Medical Research Building.

References

  1. ^ "The History of the QEIIMC". Queen Elizabeth II Medical Centre Trust. Retrieved 20 September 2021.

External links

31°58′07″S 115°48′52″E / 31.96861°S 115.81438°E / -31.96861; 115.81438 (Queen Elizabeth II Medical Centre)


This page was last edited on 25 October 2023, at 01:21
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