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This is a list of hospitals in Kentucky , sorted by hospital name. Hospital [1] County City Bed count [2] Type Founded Closed Health system [1]
The first hospital was founded in 1861 in Covington, under the patronage of St. Elizabeth of Hungary. The recent acquisition of the St. Luke Hospitals expanded the system to cover all of northern Kentucky. [1] Currently there are seven medical centers which are located in Covington; Edgewood; Fort Thomas - formerly St. Luke East
In 1945, the hospital was very crowded with a population of 2,000; as late as 1967, there were over 1,000 residents. Eastern State Hospital was an isolated institution, separate from the surrounding community. Many employees lived on the grounds in cottages, dormitories, separate rooms in the main hospital building, or with the residents.
Two more Ohio hospitals came under the direction of the sisters - St. Joseph Health Center in Warren in 1924 and St. Elizabeth in Boardman. By 2011, Humility of Mary Health Partners was formed to oversee the administration and management of St. Elizabeth Hospital and St. Joseph Health Center and several other area health-care services. [10]
A state certificate was filed because the hospital saw a record number of patients in December. Accounting for an annual 4.5% growth rate, the hospital would be at 100% capacity by 2011. The hospital, however, has been achieving a 10% annual growth rate. [10] The hospital is currently at 85% capacity.
Saint Joseph Hospital was founded on October 2, 1877, by the Sisters of Charity of Nazareth, a Bardstown, Kentucky-based group who managed schools and orphanages around the state, as well as the St Joseph Infirmary hospital in Louisville. The Lexington branch of the St Joseph Infirmary was started in October 1877 by Sister Euphrasia Stafford.
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Veterans' health care in the United States is separated geographically into 19 regions (numbered 1, 2, 4–10, 12 and 15–23) [1] known as VISNs, or Veterans Integrated Service Networks, into systems within each network headed by medical centers, and hierarchically within each system by division level of care or type.