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The Care of Strangers: The Rise of America's Hospital System (1995) history to 1920 table of contents and text search; Rosner, David. A Once Charitable Enterprise: Hospitals and Health Care in Brooklyn and New York 1885–1915 (1982) Starr, Paul.
American Journal of Public Health and the Nations Health 38.11 (1948): pp.1539-1550. online; Bordley, James, and A. McGehee Harvey. Two centuries of American medicine, 1776-1976 (1976). online; Bonner, Thomas N. The Kansas Doctor: A Century of Pioneering (Kansas UP, 1959) pp 120--171, argues Kansas was a national leader in public health in 1904 ...
Pages in category "Hospitals established in the 1920s" The following 3 pages are in this category, out of 3 total. This list may not reflect recent changes. A.
In the late 1920s, the women's specialties in health care included 294,000 trained nurses, 150,000 untrained nurses, 47,000 midwives, and 550,000 other hospital workers (most of them women). [ 17 ] Sandelowski finds that by 1900 physicians were allowing nurses to routinely use the thermometer and stethoscope , and in some cases even the new X ...
Hospitals disestablished in 1920 (2 P) Hospitals disestablished in 1923 (1 P) Hospitals disestablished in 1927 (1 P) This page was last edited on 24 May 2020, at 01: ...
1920s: Culture Wars. As European economies recovered and the USA boomed in the wake of World War I, the number of Americans living in cities exceeded the number on farms for the first time.
Hospitals established in the 1920s (10 C, 3 P) Hospitals established in the 1930s (10 C, 2 P) Hospitals established in the 1940s (10 C, 3 P)
St. Mary's Medical Center (SMMC) is the oldest continuously operating hospital and the first Catholic hospital in San Francisco. St. Mary's Hospital was opened on July 27, 1857 by the Sisters of Mercy. 1858 St. Joseph Community Hospital: Vancouver, Washington: Merged PeaceHealth Southwest Medical Center, 2010 [32] 1858 Long Island College Hospital