Date Published: 22/07/2025
The fateful saga of the Camposol Hospital, another victim of hubris in Murcia
The privately funded Hospital del Guadalentín facility never fully became operational and is now closed due to debts and lack of public agreements just six months after opening

Three years after it was announced as the most ambitious healthcare project for Mazarrón, the Hospital del Guadalentín on the Camposol urbanisation closed its doors, a mere six months after beginning operations.
Initially presented at the headquarters of the Murcian employers’ association CROEM, the project was roundly backed by everyone from the regional government, including the President of the Region of Murcia, Fernando López Miras, and the Regional Minister of Health, Juan José Pedreño to the local community in Camposol.
The hospital was developed by the private Mederi Salud Group and constructed at speed, with all the promise of a revolution in healthcare not only for Camposol but for the whole of southwest Murcia. Ther hospital quickly became the sponsor for the local football team, Club Deportivo Bala Azul, and they announced that they would be accepting medical insurance from international companies so they could treat foreign citizens.
And yet, despite an investment of €11 million to equip the building with state-of-the-art facilities – including three operating theatres, a high-tech Da Vinci robot for precise surgery, six consulting rooms and a 38-bed hospitalisation area – it never became operational.
The only part of the hospital that did manage to open was the Accident & Emergency department, which began operating in early August 2024, offering a 24-hour service during the busy summer season when the population of Mazarrón can swell to around 300,000 due to the influx of tourists.
Laboratories and diagnostic facilities, including testing and X-ray services, were also put in place. A large team of professionals, led by a former medical director of the Hospital Virgen de la Arrixaca in Murcia, was brought on board.

However, former staff reported that demand for the hospital’s services fell drastically short of expectations, with only around 10 patients a day using the A&E service, the majority of whom were foreign residents from Camposol, not all of whom reside in the area year-round.
This made the service essentially a private facility with very limited local uptake, in spite of all the positive noises everyone had been making about it before.
Hospital staff noted that despite a relatively successful summer of 2024, no agreements were reached with the Murcian Health Service (SMS) or private insurers. One former employee explained that keeping the emergency department running became financially unviable: “It was unsustainable to maintain a team with two doctors on call, each earning €1,000.”
As autumn arrived, staff reductions began without prior notice. “Many workers turned up for their shifts only to discover they had been dismissed,” one doctor claimed.
Soon after, payments to workers and suppliers stopped, and a collective redundancy plan, known in Spain as an ‘ERE’, was filed.
By mid-November, the Emergency Department was closed. Although the Mederi Salud Group stated at the time that this was merely a restructuring of the service, reducing hours to 8am-3pm, the department never reopened. In the following months, all services at the hospital were discontinued.
The Unión Murciana de Hospitales y Clínicas (UMHC) has now confirmed that the hospital is currently inactive. “They tried to keep going after the closure of the A&E, but activity ceased around February and the hospital is now closed,” a spokesperson said.
The Regional Ministry of Health confirmed that the centre had been granted the necessary authorisations to provide all basic services, though these were never put into operation.
Essentially, the hospital’s closure is the result of mounting debts to construction firms, suppliers and staff, leaving the ambitious project effectively abandoned. Now, it is just one more hulking, shiny, empty shell to add to Murcia’s list of expensive, ill-fated projects such as the Paramount Park and any number of Polaris World developments.
With property prices and demand for real estate ever-increasing and consumer debt levels once again rising to pre-2008 levels, when the Spanish property bubble burst and there was a catastrophic financial crash, there is understandably something of a gold-rush feeling to invest in growth in the Region of Murcia, but it’s hard to shake the sickly sense of history repeating itself.
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