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This is a list of hospitals in New Mexico (U.S. state), grouped by city and sorted by hospital name. With a population of a little over 2 million, there were 37 hospitals in New Mexico in 2019. With a population of a little over 2 million, there were 37 hospitals in New Mexico in 2019.
Christus St. Vincent Regional Medical Center is a general hospital located in Santa Fe, New Mexico, United States. The hospital is the oldest in the State of New Mexico , since being established in the downtown plaza before it was moved in 1977 to developing St. Michaels Drive.
Gerald Champion Regional Medical Center is a general hospital, owned and operated by the non-profit Otero County Hospital Association, that serves the Alamogordo, New Mexico area. It is the first military/civilian shared hospital facility in the United States. [1] [2] GCRMC is accredited by the Det Norske Veritas. [3]
The name was officially changed to University of New Mexico Hospital in 1979. The hospital has expanded several times over the years. [4] The Mental Health Center originally opened in 1969. The UNM Cancer Center was established in 1975, and is currently the only NCI Comprehensive Cancer Center in the state of New Mexico. [5]
Oct. 25—Bryanna Baker, 42, moved from New Mexico to Virginia because she was the victim of medical malpractice that changed her life so much she couldn't handle the New Mexico altitude.
In 2023, three data breaches were reported: Yorkshire Wellness Group, Corp reported a storage facility was sold at auction containing 1,000 individual medical records; the New Mexico Department of ...
Presbyterian Healthcare Services is a private not-for-profit [1] health care system and health care provider in the State of New Mexico. [2] It owns and operates 9 hospitals in 7 New Mexico communities as well as Presbyterian Homes & Services, an organization providing retirement and senior care. . [3] It also operates Presbyterian Health Plan.
That worrisome trend was on lawmakers' minds in 2019, when they approved the creation of a grant program to fund medical training, with a goal of increasing the number of new doctors in New Mexico.