Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The National Center for Trauma-Based Disorders had both trauma stabilization and trauma treatment programs as well as a program for those with trauma and co-occurring eating disorders and addictions. Two Rivers Psychiatric Hospital was at one time one of two private, free-standing psychiatric hospitals in the Kansas City area, the other being ...
In the early 2000s, the Greater Kansas City Psychoanalytic Institute merged with the older Topeka Psychoanalytic Society. The Psychoanalytic Study Group of Kansas City was incorporated in 1965. During the 1990s it changed its name to the Greater Kansas City Psychoanalytic Society. [2] The Greater Kansas City Psychoanalytic Institute opened in 1996.
Neosho Memorial Regional Medical Center – Chanute; Ness County District Hospital No.2 – Ness City; Newman Regional Health – Emporia; Newton Medical Center – Newton; Northeast Kansas Center for Health and Wellness – Horton; Northwest Kansas Surgery Center – Hays; Norton County Hospital – Norton; Osawatomie State Hospital – Osawatomie
The Kansas Pregnancy Care Network filed its required report on the first ... is in charge of administering $2 million appropriated by the Legislature for use by anti-abortion counseling centers.
Kansas businesses will see a positive change when submitting required filings with the Secretary of State’s office in 2024. During the 2021 Kansas legislative session, my office introduced a ...
The bill says the expedited treatment applies to any patient diagnosed with a sexually transmitted disease, which lawmakers say is too vague, hypothetically applying to conditions such as COVID-19 ...
Kearney County was established on March 6, 1873, and was dissolved in 1883, with the land area being split between Hamilton and Finney counties. It was reestablished with its original borders in 1887, and organized on March 27, 1888. In 1889, the name was corrected to Kearny County (without an extra "e") to match the last name of Philip Kearny ...
The first buildings in both Topeka and Osawatomie were designed by John G. Haskell who was among the architects of the Kansas State Capitol, and the hospital was designed in according to the Kirkbride Plan. As of 2010, the majority of the hospital had been demolished, and in June of that year, the center building was also demolished.