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[1] [2] [3] Certificates of need are necessary for the construction of medical facilities in 35 states and are issued by state health care agencies: The certificate-of-need requirement was originally based on state law. New York passed the first certificate-of-need law in 1964, the Metcalf–McCloskey Act.
Medical Necessity: Health Care Access and the Politics of Decision Making by Daniel Skinner, a book published by the University of Minnesota Press (2019). Charles Martin, "Medical Use of Cannabis in Australia: 'Medical necessity' defences under current Australian law and avenues for reform" (2014) 21(4) Journal of Law and Medicine 875.
The original buildings date to 1932, with additional buildings completed in 1937, 1945, and 1946. A major expansion occurred in the 1970s. In 1978, President Jimmy Carter named the hospital after U.S. Representative from South Carolina, William Jennings Bryan Dorn. [2] The complex includes the hospital, recreation, dining, and residential ...
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]
Lexington Medical Center is a medical complex in Lexington, SC.Lexington Medical Center is owned by Lexington County Health Service District, Inc., a private company. The network includes six community medical centers, an occupational health facility, the largest nursing home in the Carolinas, an Alzheimer's disease care center, and seventy physician practices in a variety of services.
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.
The Regional Medical Center of Orangeburg & Calhoun Counties (or TRMC for short) is a 286-bed non-profit hospital in Orangeburg, South Carolina. It is owned and operated jointly by the counties of Orangeburg and Calhoun , governed by a 17-member board representing both counties. [ 1 ]
McLeod Clarendon is an 81-bed acute hospital located in Manning, South Carolina. [1] McLeod Dillon is a 79-bed acute hospital located in Dillon, South Carolina. [1] McLeod Seacoast, located in Little River, South Carolina, is a 118-bed hospital offering a wide range of inpatient and outpatient services. Its medical staff includes more than 120 ...