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OSF HealthCare is a not-for-profit Catholic health care organization that operates a medical group, hospital system, and other health care facilities in Illinois and Michigan. [3] Headquartered in Peoria, Illinois , OSF HealthCare is owned and operated by the Sisters of the Third Order of St. Francis .
On July 1, 1899, six of the Sisters of the Third Order of St. Francis moved to Rockford at the request of the citizens to open a hospital. [1] The order had previously moved to America from Prussia in 1875, when Otto von Bismarck banned religious orders from the country. [1]
Children's Hospital of Illinois (CHOI) is a nationally ranked pediatric acute care hospital located within OSF Saint Francis Medical Center in Peoria, Illinois. The hospital has 144 beds. [17] It is affiliated with The University of Illinois College of Medicine, [18] and is a member of OSF Health.
OSF St. Joseph Medical Center is a 149-bed Level II trauma center hospital complex in Bloomington, Illinois, USA, and is part of the OSF Healthcare System. [1] St. Joseph Hospital accepted its first patient on 1880. The original hospital was a two-story brick mansion on Jackson Street. The current site on East Washington Street was opened in ...
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Heart of Mary Medical Center, now owned by OSF HealthCare, formerly Provena Covenant Medical Center is a 210-bed non-profit hospital in Urbana, Illinois, USA. [1] It is part of the OSF HealthCare System, headquartered in Peoria. HMMC is accredited by the Joint Commission and the Commission on Accreditation of Rehabilitation Facilities (CARF). [2]
It is affiliated with The University of Illinois College of Medicine, [2] and is a member of OSF HealthCare. The hospital provides comprehensive pediatric specialties and subspecialties to infants, children, teens, and young adults aged 0–21 [ 3 ] throughout Central Illinois .
The hospital was founded on January 19, 1930, by the Sisters of the Little Company of Mary [1] and serves much of the southwest side of Chicago.. In the early 20th century, the hospital—which was then segregated—refused to allow Dr. Arthur Falls Sr. to perform surgery on Dorothy Day, which both she and Falls protested.