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St. Luke Medical Center is an abandoned 165-bed hospital located in the northeastern region of Pasadena, California.Upon opening in 1933, the hospital was one of only 2 hospitals to serve the city of Pasadena for nearly 70 years, in tandem with Huntington Hospital on the western side of the city. [1]
Robert F. Kennedy Medical Center is a vacant former 274-bed hospital located in Hawthorne, California.Upon opening in 1926 as Hawthorne Community Hospital, the hospital was opened in tandem with Centinela Hospital Medical Center to serve the communities of Hawthorne, El Segundo, Lennox, and Southern Inglewood. [1]
The hospital was founded in 1945 by the Sisters of St. Francis of Penance and Christian Charity. In 1981, it was acquired by the Daughters of Charity of St. Vincent de Paul. [3] [4] In January 1996, the hospital's emergency department was designated a level II trauma center. [5]
Throughout California, small rural hospitals are on the brink of closure and in need of immediate assistance to ensure access to life-saving care. The only hospital in my rural county closed. Now ...
The Martin Luther King Jr. Outpatient Center, formerly known as Martin Luther King Jr. Multi-Service Ambulatory Care Center, Martin Luther King Jr./Drew Medical Center (King/Drew), and later Martin Luther King Jr.–Harbor Hospital (MLK–Harbor or King–Harbor), was a public urgent care center and outpatient clinic and former hospital in Willowbrook, an unincorporated section of Los Angeles ...
Dr. Elaine Batchlor, chief executive of MLK Community Healthcare, walks around the exterior of the emergency department at MLK Community Hospital in South Los Angeles on Jan. 2, 2023.
Joseph’s Hospital goes back even further, with the Hospital Sisters of St. Francis using their home in 1885 to nurse sick men working in lumber camps, before a three-story hospital was built in ...
The closure of Martin Luther King Jr. Multi-Service Ambulatory Care Center in 2007, due to revocation of federal funding after the hospital failed a comprehensive review by the U.S. Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services, had immediate ramifications in the South Los Angeles area, which was left without a major hospital providing indigent care.