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Hospital Est. Beds Trauma level [1] Teaching hospital Notes Ref. Adventist Medical Center: 1893 302 — No Legacy Emanuel Medical Center: 1912 554 1 No [2] Legacy Good Samaritan Hospital: 1875 539 — Yes [3] Portland Shriners Hospital: 1923 29 — No Pediatric facility Providence Portland Medical Center: 1941 483 — No Providence St. Vincent ...
On January 31, 1971, the hospital used in-part large military buses capable of carrying 18 stretchers at a time to transport patients to the new hospital building. [7] The facility at that time had a single, 13-story tower that consisted of seven floors of patient rooms. [7] The new building had 400 hospital beds, while the old hospital had 420 ...
Legacy Emanuel Medical Center is a hospital located in the Eliot neighborhood of Portland, Oregon, United States. Founded in 1912, it is one of only two Level I trauma centers in the state of Oregon, [ i ] and home to the only burn center between Seattle and Sacramento . [ 6 ]
Oregon Health & Science University Hospital (OHSU Hospital) is a 576-bed teaching hospital, biomedical research facility, and Level I trauma center located on the campus of Oregon Health & Science University (OHSU) in Portland in the U.S. state of Oregon.
Providence Portland Medical Center, located at 4805 NE Glisan St. in the North Tabor neighborhood of Portland, Oregon, is a full-service medical center specializing in cancer and cardiac care. Opened in 1941, the hospital is licensed for 483 beds, and has over 3,000 employees. There are approximately 1,000 physicians on staff.
Providence Willamette Falls Medical Center (Willamette Falls) is a not-for-profit acute care hospital operated by Providence Health & Services in Oregon City, Oregon, United States. Established in 1954 as Doctors' Hospital, the hospital moved to its current location in 1961 and has 143 licensed beds at its 243,000-square-foot (22,600 m 2) facility.
Kaiser Permanente opened the Sunnyside hospital on Portland's eastside in 1975. [2] Politician Mary Wendy Roberts was treated at the hospital and underwent surgery in 1978 for internal bleeding. [3] In 1983, the hospital contained 125 beds, [4] which grew to 150 beds in 1985. [5]
A third hospital, the Portland Veterans Affairs Medical Center [26] is located next to the main OHSU campus; this hospital is run by the United States Department of Veterans Affairs and is outside the auspices of OHSU. A 660 feet (200 m) pedestrian skybridge connecting OHSU Hospital and the VA Medical Center was constructed in 1992. [27]