![Newspaper cutting from 1963 reporting on patient found alive in the mortuary](/media/images/versions/img94joktmu730995.jpg)
Undertaker makes shocking discovery in mortuary
Undertakers got the shock of their lives when a patient declared dead at Willesden General Hospital showed signs of life when she was transferred to the mortuary.
Read moreUndertakers got the shock of their lives when a patient declared dead at Willesden General Hospital showed signs of life when she was transferred to the mortuary.
Read moreTwo hospital trusts have teamed up to improve the health of kidney transplant patients whose history of diabetes is leading to post-surgical problems including infections and complications with their transplants.
Read moreEntertainment is in the blood of Elvis impersonator Jason Cole and plenty of (fake) claret will be spilt when the family home in Ealing is transformed into a haunted house to raise money for Meadow House Hospice.
Read moreNorthwick Park’s longest-serving member of staff is still at her work station as she approaches her eightieth birthday.
Read more
The trust has made a significant contribution to a study into how best to protect babies against life-threatening infections.
Read moreAn RAF veteran who survived two nuclear blasts has been honoured along with thousands of colleagues who took part in secretive nuclear weapons testing in the Pacific Ocean in the 1950s.
Read moreA new 32-bed unit will be built on top of the existing A&E department at Northwick Park providing the hospital with much needed additional bed space.
Read moreShirlee Hunte oversees the recruitment and wellbeing of volunteers who work at the hospital trust.
Read moreLabourers Manus Gallagher and Seamus Greene found themselves buried alive when the sewer they were working in beneath St Ann’s Road, Harrow, collapsed one morning in 1975.
Read moreA concert pianist raising money for the hospital that saved her life will perform a piece of music that helped her through her darkest days at a charity concert on November 30.
Read more