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As of 2020, CPMC operates three acute care hospitals: Davies Campus [3] (Castro & Duboce Streets, formerly Franklin Hospital) Mission Bernal Campus [4] (3555 Cesar Chavez Street), which opened in 2018 replacing St. Luke's [5] Van Ness Campus (1101 Van Ness Ave), which opened in 2019 with 274 beds [6]
CPMC may refer to: California Pacific Medical Center , a general medical/surgical and teaching hospital in San Francisco, California, U.S. Central Park Medical College , a private medical school in Lahore, Pakistan
Until the opening of UCSF Benioff Children's Hospital's pediatric emergency department in 2013, [18] Sutter ran the only pediatric emergency department in San Francisco. [ 19 ] Scout by Sutter Health is a 12-week, nonclinical program targeted at people aged 12 to 26 designed to help them deal with anxiety, depression, and stress.
An enlargeable map of the 58 counties of the state of California. This is a list of hospitals in California (), grouped by county and sorted by hospital name. In healthcare in California, only a general acute care hospital or acute psychiatric hospital, as licensed by the California Department of Public Health, can be referred to as a "hospital."
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San Francisco opened its first permanent hospital in 1857. [18] A hospital has been at Potrero Avenue since 1872, [19] when the city of San Francisco built a 400-bed hospital on Potrero, an all wood hospital, one of four emergency hospitals eventually built by 1904, Central, Harbor, Park and Potrero. [20]
Laguna Honda Hospital and Rehabilitation Center is a nonprofit, publicly funded, 780 bed long-term acute care hospital in San Francisco, California, United States. It was founded in 1866 during the California Gold Rush as an almshouse, and later grew into an asylum, then an accredited hospital in 1963. It has been described as America's "last ...
Founded in 1905 in San Francisco by five physicians, they undertook to build "the most up-to-date modern hospital west of Chicago." It was not founded as a Catholic hospital, despite its name. [3] The campus also contained a school for female students, the Saint Francis Memorial Hospital School of Nursing, which also founded in 1905. [6]