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Sentara Health is a not-for-profit healthcare organization serving Virginia, northeastern North Carolina and Florida. It is based in Hampton Roads, Virginia, and offers services in 12 acute care hospitals, with 3,739 beds, 1.2 million members in its health plan, [1] [2] [3] 10 nursing centers, and three assisted living facilities across the two states.
Sentara: Sentara Martha Jefferson Hospital: Charlottesville: 176 [30] Sentara: Sentara Norfolk General Hospital: Norfolk: 563 Level I Sentara, Eastern Virginia Medical School: Sentara Northern Virginia Medical Center: Woodbridge, Prince William County: 183 Level III Sentara: Formerly Potomac Hospital Sentara Obici Hospital: Suffolk: 168 Sentara ...
Sentara Norfolk General Hospital: Norfolk: Virginia: 558 I Sentara Northern Virginia Medical Center: Woodbridge: Virginia: 199 III Sentara Virginia Beach General Hospital: Virginia Beach: Virginia: 273 III Bon Secours Southside Regional Medical Center: Petersburg: Virginia: 327 III Virginia Commonwealth University Medical Center: Richmond ...
Sentara Norfolk General Hospital (SNGH) is a large academic hospital, which serves as the primary teaching institution for the adjacent Eastern Virginia Medical School. Located in Norfolk, Virginia , in the Ghent neighborhood and adjacent to Downtown, the hospital serves as the Hampton Roads region's only Level I trauma center . [ 1 ]
Sentara Northern Virginia Medical Center (SNVMC) is a 183-bed, not-for-profit community hospital serving Prince William County and its surrounding communities. Potomac Hospital, an independent, non-profit community hospital, merged with Sentara Healthcare in December 2009 and is now known as Sentara Northern Virginia Medical Center (from April 16, 2012).
This article relating to a hospital in Virginia is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it.
A Confederate hospital was built at Mt. Jackson, the end of the southern spur of the Manassas Gap Railroad, to tend to the wounded from Northern Virginia battlefields who were transported in the early part of the war by rail to the hospital. The hospital could accommodate 500 patients and was run by Dr. Andrew Russell Meem, a native of Mt. Jackson.
Spotsylvania Regional Medical Center is a $175 million 133 inpatient bed facility that provides a wide range of in/out patient services including emergency care, cardiac care, and behavioral health services.