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US Renal Care This page was last edited on 6 February 2024, at 23:02 (UTC). Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License ...
After the attack on Pearl Harbor in 1941, the US military occupied the hospital during World War II and renamed it Kuakini Medical Center, after the street. [2] The street was in turn named for John Adams Kuakini (1791–1844) who was acting Governor of Oahu in the 1830s. [3] In 1945 the hospital returned to civil control.
The company then changed its name to Total Renal Care Holdings, Inc. In October 1995, the company became a public company via an initial public offering, raising $107 million. [5] By December 1996, DLJ had made a 386% return on its $10.5 million investment. [7] On February 27, 1998, the company acquired Renal Treatment Centers for $1.3 billion ...
Pages in category "Renal dialysis organizations in the United States" The following 5 pages are in this category, out of 5 total. This list may not reflect recent changes .
M Matsunaga VA Medical Center is located on the grounds of the Tripler Army Medical Center military facility [4] in Honolulu, Hawaii and comprises three VA facilities, the Ambulatory Care Clinic (ACC), the Center For Aging (CFA) building which currently houses both the Community Living Center (CLC) and the PTSD Residential Recovery Program ...
Northwest Kidney Centers’ full-service outpatient renal-specialty pharmacy, one of the first in the nation, [21] serves people with advancing chronic kidney disease, on dialysis, or living with a kidney transplant. In 2008, Northwest Kidney Centers collaborated with UW Medicine in the creation of the Kidney Research Institute. Funding from ...
After the Chinatown fire in 1900, Mori worked as a member of the Japanese Benevolent Society to start a charity hospital, which later became Kuakini Medical Center. [5] Mori held leadership positions in community organizations such as the Japanese Benevolent Society, the United Japanese Society, the Higher Wage Association, [ 3 ] and the ...
Schematic of semipermeable membrane during hemodialysis, where blood is red, dialysing fluid is blue, and the membrane is yellow. Kidney dialysis (from Greek διάλυσις, dialysis, 'dissolution'; from διά, dia, 'through', and λύσις, lysis, 'loosening or splitting') is the process of removing excess water, solutes, and toxins from the blood in people whose kidneys can no longer ...