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Agnesian HealthCare (Waupun Memorial Hospital) Waupun: Dodge: 25 [2] Aspirus Wausau Hospital: Wausau: Marathon: 235/325 [1] [2] Milwaukee Regional Medical Center - Wauwatosa [note 3] Wauwatosa: Milwaukee - Aurora West Allis Memorial Hospital West Allis: Milwaukee: 277/350 [1] [2] Rogers Memorial Hospital - Milwaukee West Allis: Milwaukee: 81 [1 ...
CHI Health (formerly Alegent Health) is a regional healthcare network headquartered in Omaha.The combined organization consists of 28 hospitals, two stand-alone behavioral health facilities, and more than 150 employed physician practices in Iowa, Minnesota, Nebraska, and North Dakota.
The Palmer Memorial Hospital in 1905. The original Janesville City Hospital was founded in 1883 by Dr. Henry Palmer, a Civil War surgeon general who had trained Daniel Hale Williams, an African American surgeon who, in 1893, was the first physician to successfully perform an open heart surgery.
In 2018, Dignity Health and Catholic Health Initiatives received a merger approval from the Catholic Church, through the Vatican.Merged on February 1, 2019, as CommonSpirit Health, the new company formed as the largest Catholic health system, [12] and the second-largest nonprofit hospital chain, in the United States.
Founded in 1897, Advocate Lutheran General Hospital is the sixth largest hospital in the Chicago area, and it operates a Level I trauma center. It also is home to Advocate Children's Hospital – Park Ridge, the only children's hospital in the greater north and northwest suburban region of Chicago. The hospital is a part of Advocate Aurora Health.
Community First Medical Center, Chicago; Crawford Memorial Hospital, Robinson ... Kindred Chicago Central Hospital, Chicago ... Chicago; Burnham City Hospital ...
Louis A. Weiss Memorial Hospital; Lurie Children's Hospital; M. Methodist Hospital of Chicago; Mount Sinai Medical Center; N. ... University of Chicago Medical Center;
A block within the Illinois Medical District bounded by Taylor, Wood, Polk and Lincoln (now Wolcott) Streets was home to the Chicago Cubs baseball club from 1893 to 1915, at the 16,000 capacity West Side Park. The first game was held on May 14, 1893 (Cincinnati 13, Chicago 12) and the last game was on October 3, 1915 (Chicago 7, St. Louis 2).