Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The University of Kentucky Salvation Army Clinic [1] [2] is a free clinic run by medical students in Lexington, Kentucky. [ 3 ] [ 4 ] Founded in 1986, it is the oldest community service project run through the UK College of Medicine and one of the oldest continuously operational student-run free clinics in the United States.
It is currently operated as a Bed & Breakfast hotel and event venue. It was built in 1795. The grounds of Forest Retreat include the Metcalfe family burial plot. Interred at this plot are Thomas Metcalfe (1780–1855) and various of his relatives, and 1954 Kentucky Derby-winning horse, Determine. Thomas Metcalfe was a stonemason and later 10th ...
Kentucky Children's Hospital; King's Daughters Medical Center: A 465-bed medical facility in Ashland that was purchased by the University of Kentucky in December 2022. [3] [4] St. Claire Regional Medical Center: A 139-bed medical facility in Morehead that was purchased by the University of Kentucky in July 2024. [5]
The hospital operates a 300,000 square-foot facility, serving 50 counties in Kentucky with a 195-bed capacity. Last year, Bruce Simpson found himself in one of those beds. “A little over a year ...
Baptist Health is a health system based in Louisville, Kentucky. It consists of eight hospitals, along with affiliated physician groups, urgent care centers and freestanding emergency departments, therapy and rehabilitation clinics, and various other health-related service centers.
For premium support please call: 800-290-4726 more ways to reach us
The Mother Goose House is a bed and breakfast and monument in Hazard, Kentucky. In 1930, Hazard resident George Stacy took inspiration to build a home in the shape of a goose after his wife had skinned the body of one he had brought home for Thanksgiving. Construction started on the Mother Goose in 1935 and was completed in 1940.
Under contract with the University of Kentucky's UK HealthCare, [7] Eastern State has built a $129 million facility in which they will now house their patients (roughly 125–175). The facility is one large building with three large, three-story towers, named after the old buildings from the 4th Street campus (Gragg, Allen, and Wendell).