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b.p.+koirala+memorial+cancer+hospital Latitude and Longitude:

27°39′49″N 84°25′07″E / 27.663716°N 84.418733°E / 27.663716; 84.418733
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
B.P. Koirala Memorial Cancer Hospital
Geography
LocationChitwan, Nepal
Coordinates 27°39′49″N 84°25′07″E / 27.663716°N 84.418733°E / 27.663716; 84.418733
Organisation
Funding Non-profit hospital
Type Specialist / Teaching
History
Opened29 December 1994
Links
Website www.bpkmch.org.np
Lists Hospitals in Nepal

B.P. Koirala Memorial Cancer Hospital (or BPKMCH) is a tertiary cancer hospital located outside the Kathmandu valley in Bharatpur, Chitwan District, Nepal.

The hospital is named in honor of Bishweshwar Prasad Koirala, the first democratically elected Prime Minister of Nepal who died of throat cancer in 1982. [1]

In 1995, it began offering day services and in 1999 began treating inpatients. The hospital was funded equally by China and Nepal, with China sending doctors and other personnel to help train staff for the new facility. [1][ citation needed]

References

  1. ^ "Bisweswar P. Koirala Dies; Ex-Prime Minister of Nepal". The Washington Post. 1982-07-22. p. C4. Retrieved 2008-12-10.

External links



b.p.+koirala+memorial+cancer+hospital Latitude and Longitude:

27°39′49″N 84°25′07″E / 27.663716°N 84.418733°E / 27.663716; 84.418733
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
B.P. Koirala Memorial Cancer Hospital
Geography
LocationChitwan, Nepal
Coordinates 27°39′49″N 84°25′07″E / 27.663716°N 84.418733°E / 27.663716; 84.418733
Organisation
Funding Non-profit hospital
Type Specialist / Teaching
History
Opened29 December 1994
Links
Website www.bpkmch.org.np
Lists Hospitals in Nepal

B.P. Koirala Memorial Cancer Hospital (or BPKMCH) is a tertiary cancer hospital located outside the Kathmandu valley in Bharatpur, Chitwan District, Nepal.

The hospital is named in honor of Bishweshwar Prasad Koirala, the first democratically elected Prime Minister of Nepal who died of throat cancer in 1982. [1]

In 1995, it began offering day services and in 1999 began treating inpatients. The hospital was funded equally by China and Nepal, with China sending doctors and other personnel to help train staff for the new facility. [1][ citation needed]

References

  1. ^ "Bisweswar P. Koirala Dies; Ex-Prime Minister of Nepal". The Washington Post. 1982-07-22. p. C4. Retrieved 2008-12-10.

External links



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