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ER One is a prototype hospital envisioned for the Washington, D.C., area. The hospital is an all-scenarios facility, designed to handle, for example, a huge influx of contaminated patients from a terrorist attack. The emergency department can accommodate 220 patients in 24 hours, a figure that can easily double in emergency situations. ER One ...
MedStar Washington Hospital Center; Psychiatric Institute of Washington; Sibley Memorial Hospital; Specialty Hospital of Washington - Capitol Hill; Specialty Hospital of Washington - Hadley; St. Elizabeths Hospital; United Medical Center (opened in 1966 as Cafritz Memorial Hospital; also formerly known as Greater Southeast Community Hospital) [2]
This hospital opened as North Arundel Hospital in 1965 with three floors and limited acute care services. In 2000, North Arundel Hospital joined into UMMS and in 2005, the name was changed to UM Baltimore Washington Medical Center to reflect the hospital's growth in size and greater regionality from expanded services. [2]
This is a list of hospitals in the U.S. state of Washington, sorted by city and hospital name. The first hospital in the modern-day state of Washington was established at Fort Vancouver in 1858, serving fur traders and local indigenous people.
The George Washington University Hospital (GWUH) is a for-profit hospital in Washington, D.C., affiliated with the George Washington University School of Medicine and Health Sciences. Since 2022, the hospital is 100% owned and operated by Universal Health Services , though it maintains significant ties to George Washington University .
United Medical Center, formerly Greater Southeast Community Hospital, is the only public hospital in Washington D.C. [1] The 330-bed facility is located in the Washington Highlands neighborhood. [ 2 ]
St. Joseph Hospital was opened in January 1891, established by nuns of the Sisters of St. Joseph of Peace; it was the first hospital established by what is now PeaceHealth. [7] St. Joseph was originally located in a two-story home in Fairhaven with 30 beds. The hospital moved to their first permanent home—on Forest Street—in 1901.
A photo of The Washington Sanitarium taken between 1910 and 1926. When Washington Sanitarium first opened in 1907, it was Montgomery County's first cardiac center. [7] Today, more than 400 open-heart surgeries and 5,000 interventional cardiology procedures are performed annually at the hospital.