Although Milton Keynes built up rapidly in the 1960s and 1970s,
its growing population had to rely on the hospitals in Aylesbury, Bedford, Dunstable and Northampton. A campaign "Milton Keynes is Dying for a Hospital" was mounted in the 1970s, leading to the construction of a four-ward community hospital that opened in 1979. At the formal opening of
the shopping building in September 1979,
Lord Campbell successfully lobbied the Prime Minister for a hospital appropriate to the planned population of the city and work began on the construction of the main hospital in 1980.
University teaching hospital In March 2015, the Hospital Trust agreed to provide clinical teaching facilities to the
University of Buckingham, and renamed itself a "university hospital trust" accordingly. The university's
school of medicine offers
MBChB degrees and
MD postgraduate degrees. In its first year of inviting applications, the university received 500 applications for its £35,000 a year undergraduate medicine course. Construction of a new building to provide teaching and study space for medical students began in 2017. The building was officially opened in February 2018.
Redevelopment and expansion In October 2022, the new "Maple Centre" opened beside A&E (replacing the former "Maple Unit", a nominally temporary building). Its purpose is to ease the pressure on A&E by treating less serious cases. Construction work on a new radiotherapy centre began in December 2022. ==Services==