Today, the hospital provides general and specialized medical services through its
dentistry,
forensic medicine,
internal medicine,
orthopedics,
pediatrics,
preventive medicine,
psychiatry,
obstetrics and gynecology,
ophthalmology,
otolaryngology,
radiology and
surgery clinics. It also operates five specialized medical service centers, namely: Cardiac Center,
Glaucoma Imaging & Diagnostic Center,
Excimer Laser Center, Chulalongkorn
Craniofacial Center, and the Queen Sirikit Center for
Breast Cancer. It serves as the office of many
WHO Collaborating Centres in Thailand. In 2007, ground was broken for the hospital's Bhumisirimangkalanusorn Building — claimed to be the largest medical hub in
ASEAN, is a 12.5-billion
baht (US$376 million) 29-storey facility. It was jointly financed by the state and the Thai Red Cross Society. The new addition opened on a partial basis in 2016 and is due to be fully inaugurated by the end of 2017. It has over 1,250 beds. Fully operational, it will house over 1,600 physicians and 2,100 nurses. File:Admin-KCMH-2026.png|Old administration building. File:MDCUbu.JPG|alt=| File:King Chulalongkorn Memorial Hospital from Lumpini Park 1.jpg|King Chulalongkorn Memorial Hospital has created a distinctive landmark on Bangkok’s skyline. File:Rama X-KCMH 2026.png|Green spaces within King Chulalongkorn Memorial Hospital and Chakri Thasamaramathibodindra Building. == See also ==