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Memorial Hospital Central, also called UCHealth Memorial Hospital Central, is an acute hospital in Colorado Springs, Colorado, in El Paso County. Originally established in 1904, the hospital has 485 beds and is a Level I trauma center, the only Level I trauma center in southern Colorado. [3] [4]
Although the present campus was opened in 1999, [5] its roots trace back to 1914 and Frederic E. Willett, M.D., who was involved with Steamboat Springs’ first public hospital. In 1946, the Steamboat Springs Hospital Association's board selected the location for The Routt County Memorial Hospital, which opened in 1950. [6]
Hospital County City Bed count Trauma center Founded Notes AdventHealth Avista: Boulder: Louisville: 114: Level III: 1990: Formerly Avista Adventist Hospital [2] AdventHealth Castle Rock: Douglas: Castle Rock: 60: Level III: 2011: Formerly Castle Rock Adventist Hospital [2] AdventHealth Littleton: Arapahoe: Littleton: 231: Level II: 1989 ...
The UCHealth system was founded in 2012 with the merger of the University of Colorado Hospital and the Poudre Valley Health System. [6] The University of Colorado University Hospital was originally created on October 1, 1989, as a nonprofit corporation pursuant to an act of the Colorado General Assembly, but the act was declared unconstitutional by the Colorado Supreme Court in 1990.
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In the 2017–2018 U.S. News & World Report hospital rankings, UCHealth University of Colorado Hospital ranked in the top 50 for 11 medical specialties and was rated the #15 overall adult hospital in the country. [2]
The hospital originally launched as a community hospital in 2007. It has now experienced significant growth, becoming a full-service hospital. [3] The hospital, located on the north side of Colorado Springs, operates in partnership with Memorial Hospital Central, located downtown.
Veterans' health care in the United States is separated geographically into 19 regions (numbered 1, 2, 4–10, 12 and 15–23) [1] known as VISNs, or Veterans Integrated Service Networks, into systems within each network headed by medical centers, and hierarchically within each system by division level of care or type.