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The network traces its roots to South Jersey Healthcare's Bridgeton campus founding in 1898. Underwood and Memorial hospitals were founded in 1915 and 1916, by J. Harris Underwood, MD and William Brewer, MD, respectively; they were both physicians from Jefferson Medical College in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. The two merged in 1966 to become ...
Virtua Health is an academic non-profit healthcare system in southern New Jersey that operates a network of hospitals, surgery centers, physician practices, and more. Virtua is South Jersey's largest health care provider. The main headquarters are located in Marlton.
Orange General Hospital, Orange (a/k/a Hospital Center at Orange) Pascack Valley Hospital, Westwood (now Hackensack University Medical Center North at Pascack Valley) PBI Regional Medical Center, Passaic (now St. Mary's Hospital - Passaic) Raritan Valley Hospital, Green Brook, New Jersey [4] Riverdell Hospital, Oradell (closed 1981, demolished ...
A dozen New Jersey hospitals received four stars, 16 were rated three stars, 17 earned two stars and 12 were graded one star. ... University Hospital, Camden. Holy Name Medical Center, Teaneck ...
Hospital City (in NJ) Beds [42] Type Former Network Notes Bristol-Myers Squibb Children's Hospital: New Brunswick 105 Children's Hospital Robert Wood Johnson Health System Children's Hospital of New Jersey at Newark Beth Israel Medical Center: Newark: 69 Children's Hospital Saint Barnabas Health Care System Children's Specialized Hospital: New ...
Summit Health traces its beginnings to October 1919, when co-founders William H. Lawrence, MD, and Maynard G. Bensley, MD established the company as Summit Medical Group in Summit, New Jersey. [6] The two had met in the United States Army's World War I Ambulance Company 33, which Lawrence had organized, and which was later headed by Bensley.
The hospital is also listed as the best hospital in the Central New Jersey area. [21] In 2007 the hospital was ranked nationally in four specialties by the 2007-08 U.S. News & World Report: Best Hospital rankings. The hospital was ranked #40 in geriatrics, #26 in cardiology & heart surgery, #26 in respiratory disorders, and #50 in urology. [22]
Cooper University Hospital was established in 1887 by the family of Richard M. Cooper, a Quaker physician. The original hospital had 30 beds and provided health care services to the low-income population of Camden, New Jersey. It slowly grew from a small community hospital into a 635-bed [4] regional tertiary care center.