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North Texas State Hospital – Wichita Falls Campus: Wichita Falls 575 Northeast Baptist Hospital San Antonio IV Northwest Texas Healthcare System Amarillo 444
The North Texas State Hospital (NTSH) is a trio of inpatient mental health facilities owned by the State of Texas and operated by the Texas Health and Human Service Commission's Health and Specialty Care System division. [1] NTSH has three campuses, one in Wichita Falls and two in Vernon.
Austin State Hospital (ASH), formerly known until 1925 as the Texas State Lunatic Asylum, is a 299-bed psychiatric hospital located in Austin, Texas. It is the oldest psychiatric facility in the state of Texas, and the oldest continuously operating west of the Mississippi River. [2] It is operated by the Texas Health and Human Services ...
Ben Taub General Hospital Houston Community College Coleman College for Health Sciences M.D. Anderson Cancer Center Michael E. DeBakey Veterans Affairs Medical Center in Houston Memorial Hermann Hospital Texas Children's Hospital John Sealy Hospital at UTMB-Galveston. This is a list of institutions of the Texas Medical Center.
The University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center (UT Southwestern or UTSW) is a public academic health science center in Dallas, Texas.With approximately 23,000 employees, [3] more than 3,000 full-time faculty, and nearly 4 million outpatient visits per year, UT Southwestern is the largest medical school in the University of Texas System and the State of Texas.
Scott & White Hospital - Temple; Scott & White Hospital, College Station, Texas; Scott & White Hospital, Taylor, Texas; Shriners Hospitals for Children-Texas; South Texas Health System Heart; South Texas Health System Mcallen
Brackenridge Hospital (Austin, Texas) Detroit General Hospital (privatized, now Detroit Receiving Hospital) [5] Greenville General Hospital (of the Greenville Health Authority), owned by the city of Greenville, SC. [6] It continues to own the hospital facility but leases management to Prisma Health, [7] which operates it as Prisma Health ...
In 1941, the Texas State Legislature granted funds to the University of Texas for the purpose of starting a cancer research hospital. The M.D. Anderson Foundation matched the state's gift to the university by supplying funds and land on the condition that the hospital be established in Houston and named after its founder.