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Maryvale Hospital opened in 1961. In 1998, Samaritan Health System sold Maryvale Hospital to Vanguard Health Systems. [3] In 2003, Vanguard established Abrazo Health Care as its Arizona subsidiary. In 2013, Vanguard was acquired by Tenet Healthcare. [4]
Valleywise Behavioral Health Center Maryvale (formerly Abrazo Maryvale Campus, Maryvale Hospital Medical Center, closed on Dec. 18, 2017) Psychiatric hospital: Phoenix: Maricopa: 192 1961–2017 89] Valley Hospital: Psychiatric hospital: Phoenix: Maricopa: 122
Hospital and emergency-trauma center. Valleywise Health Medical Center (Phoenix) A replacement acute care teaching hospital is to open in February, 2024; Behavioral centers. Valleywise Behavioral Health Center – Phoenix; Valleywise Behavioral Health Center – Maryvale (Phoenix) It opened in a former Abrazo Community Health Network facility ...
Abrazo Arizona Heart Hospital, formerly Arizona Heart Hospital (acquired 2010 [3]) Abrazo Arrowhead Campus, formerly Arrowhead Campus (acquired 1999 [4]) Abrazo Buckeye Emergency Center, formerly West Valley Emergency Center (opened 2011) Abrazo Central Campus, formerly Phoenix Baptist Hospital (acquired 1999 [4])
Maryvale is the most populous of Phoenix's urban villages. [23]As of 2010, Maryvale had a population of 208,189. [3] While census figures show no single ethnic group being in the majority, Caucasians made up the largest single racial group, comprising 49.5% of the community's population. [3]
602 was the original area code for Arizona, and was split in 1995 into 602, serving metropolitan Phoenix, and 520, serving the remainder of the state. [1] In 1999, 602 was split into 480, 602, and 623, [2] which were recombined in 2023. [3] 520 was split in 2001 to form area code 928. [4]
Good Samaritan Hospital eventually grew to accommodate 720 beds, becoming a non-profit teaching facility, the largest tertiary hospital in the state, and a level one trauma center. [ 4 ] [ 5 ] The 1950s and 1960s brought explosive growth to Phoenix and the need to rapidly expand hospital services in a cost-effective manner.
Vanguard owned twenty-six hospitals, including the ten Detroit Medical Center hospitals in Detroit, Michigan, five in San Antonio, Texas, four in the Chicago area, four in the Phoenix, Arizona area, and controlled an additional three hospitals through joint ventures, for a total of 6,201 licensed beds (as of 2012). [3]