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In 1998 Carter was named Madison's Citizen of the Year. [6] Carter died on December 19, 2000, at Stokes-Reynolds Memorial Hospital in Danbury, North Carolina. His funeral was held at First Baptist Church of Madison. He is buried in the cemetery at Sardis Primitive Baptist Church in Madison. [1]
This hospital, built in 1979, is now the flagship of Baptist Memorial Health Care since the closure of the Madison Campus in the Medical District, Memphis in 2000, which dated from 1912. [2] Baptist Memorial Health Care operates 22 Hospitals and numerous clinics in the three states surrounding the Memphis area. [ 3 ]
Baptist Memorial Hospital-Memphis (1912-2000) Copper Basin Medical Center ; Decatur County General Hospital (Parsons) Dr. Fred Stone, Sr. Hospital (Oliver Springs, Tennessee) Gibson General Hospital ; Humboldt General Hospital (Hulmboldt; Jellico Medical Center ; Lakeway Hospital (Morristown, Tennessee)
Reynolds also built a hospital in Winston-Salem specifically for African-Americans, named the Kate Bitting Reynolds Memorial Hospital in honor of his wife. [1] In honor of his mother, he founded the Nancy Reynolds School in Stokes County, North Carolina, and the Hardin Reynolds School in Patrick County, Virginia, to honor his father. The Kate B ...
The original Baptist Memorial Hospital was a 2,000-bed medical facility and complex of multiple hospital buildings located at 899 Madison Avenue in midtown Memphis, Tennessee. The facility closed in 2000 after 88 years of service, and was demolished in 2005.
Location of Madison County in Tennessee. This is a list of the National Register of Historic Places listings in Madison County, Tennessee. This is intended to be a complete list of the properties and districts on the National Register of Historic Places in Madison County, Tennessee, United States. Latitude and longitude coordinates are provided ...
Lee County Community Hospital, which had closed in 2013, was reopened by Ballad Health in July 2021. [ 10 ] Dennis Barry, who consulted for the Southwest Virginia Health Authority as a monitor, stated that the Ballad merger meant that healthcare access in portions of Virginia did not collapse during the COVID-19 pandemic .
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.