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Stollery Children's Hospital (University of Alberta Hospital) Edmonton 53°31′14″N 113°31′29″W / 53.52056°N 113.52472°W / 53.52056; -113.52472 ( Stollery Children's
List of hospitals in Calgary. South Health Campus. Alberta Children's Hospital (ACH) [1] East Calgary Health Centre (ECHC) [2] Foothills Medical Centre (FMC) [3] Peter Lougheed Centre (PLC) [4] Richmond Road Diagnostic & Treatment Centre (RRDTC) [5] Rockyview General Hospital (RGH) [6] Sheldon M. Chumir Health Centre (SMCHC) [7] South Calgary ...
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The first heart transplant in Western Canada was performed at the hospital in 1985, and by 2001 the hospital had conducted 500 heart and heart-lung transplants. In 2001 the Stollery Children's Hospital opened. In 2006, the hospital had the most technically advanced and only intensive care unit dedicated solely to the treatment of burn patients ...
The Stollery Children's Hospital is a 218 bed [1] children's hospital that opened in October 2001. [2] It is a "hospital within a hospital," [3] being situated within the University of Alberta Hospital and co-located with Mazankowski Alberta Heart Institute in the Walter C. Mackenzie Health Sciences Centre in Edmonton, Alberta, Canada.
The Grey Nuns Community Hospital is an acute care hospital located in the Mill Woods area of south Edmonton, Alberta, Canada. The Grey Nuns Community Hospital provides a full range of services including a 24-hour Emergency Department. The 14-bed tertiary palliative care unit is known for its delivery of care and teaching practices. [1]
The Royal Alexandra Hospital opened in 1899 at 97th Street and 103A Avenue as the Edmonton General Hospital. It was designed to hold 25 patients. The costs of opening the hospital were funded by the Women's Auxiliary. [13] In 1912, a new "modern" facility was opened on the northside of 111 Avenue between 101 and 103 Street.
It originally opened on May 19, 1922 as the Junior Red Cross Children's Hospital. [2] Its current building, opened on September 27, 2006, is the largest children's hospital in the prairie provinces and was the first free-standing pediatric facility to be built in Canada in more than 20 years [ 3 ] .