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450 Sutter Street, also called the Four Fifty Sutter Building, is a twenty-six-floor, 105-meter (344-foot) skyscraper in San Francisco, California, completed in 1929.The tower is known for its "Neo-Mayan" Art Deco design by architect Timothy L. Pflueger. [4]
In 1991, Presbyterian Hospital (at that time known as Pacific Presbyterian Medical Center [23]) and Children's Hospital merged, medical staffs were combined, and a large joint physician group was established in 1993. [24] The new multiple-facility entity was named California Pacific Medical Center (CPMC).
Huntington Health, an Affiliate of Cedars-Sinai is a 544-bed, not-for-profit hospital in Pasadena, California.The hospital originally opened as Pasadena Hospital, though the official name of the hospital is the Pasadena Hospital Association DBA (doing business as) Huntington Memorial Hospital, known locally as Huntington Hospital, Huntington, or sometimes HMH.
Two Pasadena doctors are facing allegations from the California Medical Board that they negligently prescribed painkillers and other potentially dangerous narcotics to patients.
An enlargeable map of the 58 counties of the state of California. This is a list of hospitals in California (), grouped by county and sorted by hospital name. In healthcare in California, only a general acute care hospital or acute psychiatric hospital, as licensed by the California Department of Public Health, can be referred to as a "hospital."
St. Luke Medical Center is an abandoned 165-bed hospital located in the northeastern region of Pasadena, California. Upon opening in 1933, the hospital was one of only 2 hospitals to serve the city of Pasadena for nearly 70 years, in tandem with Huntington Hospital on the western side of the city. [ 1 ]
Kylie Robinson was told in 2021 by the San Francisco medical examiner that her father, James Robinson, had overdosed in a hotel room in the city’s Tenderloin neighborhood
The Priscilla Chan and Mark Zuckerberg San Francisco General Hospital and Trauma Center [1] (ZSFG) is a public hospital in San Francisco, California, under the purview of the city's Department of Public Health. It serves as the only Level I trauma center for the 1.5 million residents of San Francisco and northern San Mateo County. [2]