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Formerly Medical University of South Carolina Hospital ... Prisma Health Greer Memorial Hospital: Greer: Greenville: 82: ... Georgetown: 124 — Tidelands/MUSC ...
Spartanburg General Hospital was organized under the authority of the South Carolina General Assembly in 1917. It officially became the Spartanburg Regional Health Services District, Inc., a political subdivision of the State of South Carolina, by the charter granted by the Secretary of State of South Carolina on May 1, 1995.
As the health care system of MUSC, patient care is provided at 16 hospitals (includes owned and affiliated), with approximately 2,700 beds and four additional hospital locations in development; more than 350 telehealth sites and connectivity to patients’ homes; and nearly 750 care locations situated in all regions of South Carolina.
Since then, the hospital has undergone multiple additions, including a $15 million, 15,000-square-foot addition in 2014 to enhance the pediatrics, medical surgery, and intensive care departments. [ 3 ] In 2021, the hospital added an additional 32 patient beds as part of a $14.5 million, 24,000 square foot expansion. [ 2 ]
The hospital system has nearly 30,000 employees across South Carolina. The company had major layoffs in Jan. 2020 as well, when it laid off more than 300 people – just before the COVID-19 ...
The Medical Center is the anchor facility for AnMed, South Carolina's largest independent, not-for-profit health system. Services provided at the Medical Center include open heart surgery, vascular surgery, general surgery, bariatric surgery, emergency/trauma medicine, a stroke/neurological center, and diagnostic MRI, CT and laboratory medicine.
Self Regional Healthcare, previously Self Memorial Hospital, [1] is a 358-bed short-term acute care hospital [2] founded on November 1, 1951 in Greenwood, South Carolina. [3] The hospital was founded by the Self Family Foundation, an organization created James Cuthbert Self, founder of the local Greenwood Mills, for that purpose. [ 4 ]
A nursing school was soon added. In 1924 the hospital had outgrown its original building, so a new hospital was built directly in front of the original one. By 1936 the staff consisted of eleven general medical practitioners and three surgeons. [4] As of 1952 it was called the Orangeburg Regional Hospital and was owned by the city of Orangeburg ...