Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Cone Health Behavioral Health Hospital (part of Cone Health), located at 700 Walter Reed Drive in Greensboro, North Carolina, is an 80-bed facility that specializes in helping children, adolescents and adults cope with mental health and/or addiction issues. Its comprehensive services focus on the total needs of the patient and their family.
The hospital opened in 1953 on North Elm Street as a 310-bed community hospital. Moses Cone Hospital is the central facility of Cone Health, a network of medical care facilities serving Guilford County and surrounding areas. As of 2023, Preston Hammock serves as regional president for the Greensboro market which includes Moses Cone Hospital. [1]
[2] listed Cone Health hospitals as a 2022-2023 High Performing Hospital in 17 of 20 common adult procedures and conditions. In August 2020, Cone Health announced its intent to merge with Sentara Healthcare, though the planned consolidation was later canceled [3] in 2021. On June 21, 2024, Cone Health announced it had agreed to be acquired by ...
Wesley Long Hospital is a facility of Cone Health, a network of hospitals and physicians serving Guilford County, North Carolina and surrounding areas. On February 24, 1972, Wesley Long's board of trustees approved a 120-bed addition and other improvements to what was then a 225-bed hospital.
“Today is a turning point in River Edge Behavioral Health’s 74 years of delivering mental health services, substance use disorder services, and most importantly, improving the quality of life ...
Stanford Health Care/Lucile Packard Children's Hospital: Stanford: California: 361 I I Sutter Health Eden Medical Center: Castro Valley: California: 130 II Sutter Roseville Medical Center: Roseville: California: 328 II Tahoe Forest Hospital: Truckee: California: 62: III UC Davis Medical Center: Sacramento: California: 625: I I UC Irvine Health ...
A look at the lives of Dr. Susan Smith McKinney Steward, the first Black female doctor in New York, and her sister Sarah J. S. Tompkins Garnet, the first Black female principal in NYC.
"I think I was only there the first day. Maybe I made it to day two," she added. "We did the read-throughs and they staged it, and then they're like, we better get somebody else."