Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The Utah State Hospital, circa 1896. The Utah State Hospital began as the Territorial Insane Asylum in 1885 at Provo, Utah, with the purpose of housing and treating those considered to be mentally ill and attempting to return them to normal levels of functioning. However, due to limited knowledge about treatment of mental health at the time ...
Special Service District of the State of Utah [17] [18] 25 Lakeview Hospital: Bountiful: MountainStar Healthcare [6] 89 Layton Hospital: Layton: Intermountain Healthcare [1] 43 LDS Hospital: Salt Lake City: Intermountain Healthcare [1] 262 Logan Regional Hospital: Logan: Intermountain Healthcare [1] 146 Lone Peak Hospital: Draper: MountainStar ...
The Superintendent's Residence at the Utah State Hospital is a historic house located at the Utah State Hospital in east Provo, Utah, United States. It was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1986. [1] [2] This Colonial Revival style home was built in 1934.
The facility is located at 1300 East Center Street on the grounds of the Utah State Hospital (a mental hospital operated by the Utah Department of Human Services). It is believed to be one of the first and largest amphitheaters built in the state. The recreation center covers three acres, seating 800 within its amphitheater and attached ...
Utah Valley Hospital (UVH) is a 395-bed full-service tertiary and acute care referral center serving Utah County, central and southern Utah that is part of the Intermountain Healthcare system. [1] It is a Level II Trauma Center. [2] From 1984 to 2016, the facility was called Utah Valley Regional Medical Center (UVRMC).
In July 2014 the Utah Department of Health issued its first permits for hash oil. [2] In 2012 a major data breach allowed hackers to access the health data of 700,000 people in the Department of Health records. [3]
President-elect Donald Trump and his team are working behind closed doors at Mar-a-Lago to staff the 47th president's administration, with loyalty the primary job requirement.
Taylor sold this house to Dr. David Westwood, who had become vice-president of the Provo General Hospital, Provo's first hospital. Westwood used part of the home as his office. Later, his son John T. Westwood, a dentist, and his family also lived in the home and shared an office (65 East 2nd North) with him.