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Other hospitals in the city merged into the centre along the years (some of them no longer in operation): Hospital de Dona Estefânia in 1877, Hospital de Arroios in 1892, Hospital de Santa Marta in 1903, Hospital Curry Cabral in 1906, Hospital de Santo António dos Capuchos in 1928, [2] and most recently, Maternidade Alfredo da Costa, in 2012. [3]
Hospital de São José (European Portuguese pronunciation: [ɔʃpiˈtal dɨ sɐ̃w ʒuˈzɛ]; "Saint Joseph's Hospital") is a public Central Hospital serving the Greater Lisbon area as part of the Central Lisbon University Hospital Centre (CHULC), a state-owned enterprise.
In the early 20th century, there was a need for a specialised hospital in Lisbon dedicated to the care of infectious diseases.Up until the end of the previous century, contagious diseases were treated in the general Saint Joseph's Hospital, until 1892, when the vacant Convent of Our Lady of Nazareth (Convento de Nossa Senhora da Nazaré) in Arroios was repurposed as the Arroios Hospital, an ...
The Centro Hospitalar e Universitário de Coimbra (C.H.U.C) [pronunciation?] is a Portuguese public healthcare complex located in Coimbra, Portugal.It is composed by 6 medical institutions: Hospital da Universidade (the original University Hospital), Hospital Pediátrico de Coimbra (Pediatric Hospital), Hospital dos Covões, Maternidade Dr. Bissaya Barreto (maternity), Maternidade Dr. Daniel ...
There are 105 hospitals in Brazil, accounting for a total of 480,332 hospital beds. 66 percent of the hospitals are private and the remaining 34% are public, being either Federal, State or Municipal hospitals.
Maternidade Alfredo da Costa (Portuguese pronunciation: [mɐtɨɾniˈðaðɨ alˈfɾeðu ðɐ ˈkɔʃtɐ], "Alfredo da Costa Maternity Hospital") is a public Central Hospital serving the Greater Lisbon area as part of the Central Lisbon University Hospital Centre (CHULC), a state-owned enterprise.
In 1910, it was renamed "Hintze Ribeiro Hospital", and it became affiliated with the Lisbon Medical-Surgical School; in 1911, following the 5 October 1910 revolution, it was renamed "Lisbon Faculty of Medicine Teaching Hospital" (Hospital Escolar da Faculdade de Medicina de Lisboa"); only in 1922 did it receive administrative and financial ...
A long process starts to build two big university hospitals, one in the country capital Lisbon (Santa Maria Hospital) and the other in the capital of the north of Portugal, the second biggest city, Porto. [3] The building of the São João Hospital was officially inaugurated on 24 July 1959 (Festa de São João do Porto), by president Américo ...