Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
UOHI was founded in 1976 by Dr. Wilbert Keon, with financial support from the Ontario Ministry of Education.Keon worked with numerous partners, including all of the hospitals in the region, the University of Ottawa, and the Ottawa Hospital Regional District Planning council, to ensure the vision of a world-renowned institute would unfold as planned.
The Ottawa Civic Hospital is one of three main campuses of The Ottawa Hospital – along with the General and Riverside campuses. With 549 beds (including the Heart Institute), the Civic Campus has the region's only adult-care trauma centre, serving Eastern Ontario, the Outaouais region of Quebec and eastern Nunavut.
University of Ottawa Heart Institute (40 Ruskin Street) Royal Ottawa Mental Health Centre (1145 Carling Avenue) Élisabeth Bruyère Hospital (43 Bruyère Street) St. Vincent Hospital (60 Cambridge Street North) Perley & Rideau Veteran's Health Centre (1750 Russell Road)
The system is affiliated with the University of Ottawa, and its three campuses are all non-profit, public teaching hospitals (the University of Ottawa Heart Institute is located at the hospital's Civic Campus). The Ottawa Hospital's Civic Campus is also one of the two trauma centres serving Eastern Ontario and southern Quebec.
The Ottawa Hospital, with Civic, General and Riverside campuses; The Children's Hospital of Eastern Ontario (CHEO) Montfort Hospital; Bruyère Continuing Care; The Faculty is affiliated with several research institutions including: The Ottawa Hospital Research Institute; The Royal Ottawa Health Care Group; University of Ottawa Heart Institute
Children's Hospital of Eastern Ontario Ottawa Civic Hospital University of Ottawa Heart Institute Ottawa's French language Montfort Hospital North York General Hospital Toronto General Hospital, R.R. McEwen atrium Hospital for Sick Children, Toronto
Keon founded the University of Ottawa Heart Institute at the Ottawa Civic Hospital in 1976, [3] acting as its CEO for more than thirty years until his retirement from that job in April 2004. [4] In 1986, he was the first Canadian to implant an artificial heart into a human as a bridge to transplant . [ 5 ]
Montfort trains Francophone healthcare professionals with the help of the hospital's knowledge institute, the Institut du Savoir Montfort (ISM), and in collaboration with its main partners, the University of Ottawa and La Cité college as well as other post-secondary education programs. In 2015, it was ranked as Canada's top 40 research ...