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This is a list of hospitals in the U.S. state of Colorado. The American Hospital Directory lists 60 hospitals in Colorado in 2024. The American Hospital Directory lists 60 hospitals in Colorado in 2024.
St. Francis Health Center was a hospital located in Colorado Springs, Colorado which closed in 2010. [1] The closing came after the opening of St. Francis Medical Center (now St. Francis Hospital) in 2008. [2] [3]
The hospital lies near the junction of Interstate 25 and Interquest Parkway. [3] The hospital, located on the north side of Colorado Springs, operates in partnership with Penrose Hospital, located in downtown Colorado Springs and with St. Francis Hospital, also located in Colorado Springs.
St. Anthony Hospital (Colorado) St. Francis Hospital (Colorado Springs, Colorado) Saint Joseph Hospital (Denver, Colorado) St. Mary-Corwin Medical Center; St. Mary's Medical Center (Grand Junction, Colorado) Saint Thomas More Hospital; St. Vincent Health (Leadville, Colorado) San Luis Valley Regional Medical Center; Sky Ridge Medical Center
Penrose Hospital is a 364-bed hospital located in Colorado Springs, Colorado and owned by Penrose-Saint Francis Health Services. The campus includes Penrose Hospital, the Penrose Cancer Center, the E Tower building, the Penrose Pavilion, and the John Zay House. [ 1 ]
Memorial Hospital Central, also called UCHealth Memorial Hospital Central, is an acute hospital in Colorado Springs, Colorado, in El Paso County. Originally established in 1904, the hospital has 485 beds and is a Level I trauma center, the only Level I trauma center in southern Colorado. [3] [4]
Colorado Springs, Colorado 80920 [1], El Paso County, Colorado, United States Coordinates 38°58′1″N 104°45′17″W / 38.96694°N 104.75472°W / 38.96694; -104
In 1874, Dr. Samuel Edwin Solly from London "moved to Manitou because of his wife's ill health." [2] Colorado Springs's first medical facility was a c. 1887 small railroad infirmary that was followed by the St. Francis of Perpetual Adoration 1888 hospital [3] on Institute Heights and the 1890–1902 Bellevue Sanitarium (later named National Deaconess Sanitarium).