Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Taking a Stand in Baton Rouge by Jonathan Bachman. Taking a Stand in Baton Rouge [1] is a photograph of Ieshia Evans, a nurse from Pennsylvania, being arrested by police officers dressed in riot gear during a protest in Baton Rouge, Louisiana, on 9 July 2016.
A 2022 survey conducted by the American Nurses Foundation found that 75% of nurses reported feeling stressed, frustrated or exhausted, while 52% reported considering leaving their position all ...
Southwest Louisiana (SWLA) is a five-parish area intersecting the Acadiana and Central Louisiana regions in the U.S. state of Louisiana. It is composed of the following parishes (counties): Allen, Beauregard, Calcasieu, Cameron, and Jefferson Davis. [1] [2] As of 2020, the combined population of the five parish area was 313,951. [3]
The gunman was killed by a member of the SWAT team that responded to the shooting. The shooting is believed to have been related to the unrest in Baton Rouge following the shooting of Alton Sterling, and the gunman was involved with black separatist and sovereign citizen organizations. [160] [161] July 11, 2016: St. Joseph, Michigan: 3 [n 1] 2 5
In 1911, Mother de Bethanie Crowley and five Franciscan Missionaries of Our Lady traveled to America, stating their desire to serve the sick and needy. [1] Eight years after establishing a hospital in Monroe, Louisiana, Mother de Bethanie was invited to Baton Rouge by Monsignor Francis Leon Gassler of St. Joseph's Cathedral and a group of leading local physicians, to tour the downtown area in ...
Baton Rouge: 1908 [2] Georges Media Group Plaquemines Gazette: Belle Chasse: The Bernice Banner News: Bernice: Jessie Kelley Boyett The Daily News: Bogalusa: Boone Newspapers: Bossier Press-Tribune: Bossier City: Specht Newspapers The Inquisitor: Bossier City: 1997 [2] Settle Talk LLC The Bunkie Record: Bunkie: Louisiana State Newspapers: St ...
This category is for stub articles relating to hospitals in the Southern United States - that is, the states shown in red on the map to the right. You can help by expanding them.
After years of financial struggle and $154 million from the state since 2012, Baton Rouge General announced the imminent closure of the Mid City emergency department on Tuesday, February 3, 2015. [1] Due to the volume of uninsured patients seeking treatment, hospital losses were exceeding $2 million per month. [2]