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HIMA-San Pablo Hospital-Bayamón: Urb. Santa Cruz, Bayamón: 336 HIMA-San Pablo Hospital-Caguas: Caguas: 440 HIMA-San Pablo Hospital-Fajardo: Fajardo: 179 HIMA-San Pablo Hospital-Humacao: Humacao: 64 Hospital Damas: Ponce: 207 Hospital Buen Samaritano: Aguadilla: 124 Hospital de la Concepción: San Germán: 186 Hospital El Maestro: Hato Rey ...
Like all municipalities of Puerto Rico, Caguas is subdivided into administrative units called barrios, which are, in contemporary times, roughly comparable to minor civil divisions, [1] (and means wards or boroughs or neighborhoods in English).
The San Juan–Bayamón–Caguas metropolitan area, most commonly known as the San Juan metropolitan area (Spanish: área metropolitana de San Juan), is the largest and most populous metropolitan statistical area (MSA) in Puerto Rico, concentrated in the capital municipality of San Juan and surrounding municipalities, including Bayamón, Caguas, and Carolina, on the northeastern coastal plain ...
In late 2011, the assets of the San Juan Bautista Hospital were acquired by the Mennonite Health System (Sistema de Salud Menonita), changing its name to Hospital Menonita de Caguas. [1] As part of a thirty-year rental agreement, the Department of Health of Puerto Rico conditioned the acquisition on retaining the school of medicine and its ...
"Municipal Government of Caguas, 1880-1903". Our Landless Patria: Marginal Citizenship and Race in Caguas, Puerto Rico, 1880-1910 . University of Nebraska Press. pp. 123+.
Tomás de Castro is a barrio in the municipality of Caguas, Puerto Rico. Its population in 2010 was 19,414. Its population in 2010 was 19,414. [ 3 ] [ 4 ] [ 5 ]
The first European settlement in the area was the Hato de Bairoa, a cattle farm established and developed between the years 1525 and 1600. The first mention of Bairoa as a district of Caguas comes from the colonial municipal budget documents of 1821 as Bairoa Abajo and Bairoa Arriba (modern day Bairoa, Aguas Buenas).
Health information management's standards history is dated back to the introduction of the American Health Information Management Association, founded in 1928 "when the American College of Surgeons established the Association of Record Librarians of North America (ARLNA) to 'elevate the standards of clinical records in hospitals and other medical institutions.'" [3]