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Danbury Hospital is a 456-bed [1] hospital in Danbury, Connecticut serving patients in Fairfield County, Connecticut, Litchfield County, Connecticut, and New Haven County, Connecticut as well as Westchester County, New York, Putnam County, New York, and Dutchess County, New York. The hospital is part of the Nuvance Health system.
Yale New Haven Health: Bridgeport: Fairfield: Yes (Level II) I 1878–present Active: Bristol Hospital Bristol Health Bristol: Hartford: Yes III Active: Cedarcrest Hospital Department of Mental Health Newington: Hartford No III 1910–2010 [4] Closed - Originally named Hartford County Home for the Care and Treatment of Persons Suffering from ...
Norwalk Hospital is a not-for-profit, acute care community teaching hospital in the Hospital Hill [1] section of Norwalk, Connecticut.The hospital serves a population of 250,000 in lower Fairfield County, Connecticut.
Greenwich Hospital is licensed as an acute care facility by the Connecticut Department of Public Health & Addiction Services. In 2017, it opened the Steven and Betsy Coman Palliative Care Center. The hospital has 777 medical staff and 1,790 employees overall. [2]
Hartford Hospital is an 938-bed [2] acute care teaching hospital located in the South End of Hartford, Connecticut. [3] Hartford Hospital was established in 1854. The hospital campus is located on Seymour Street in Hartford and is directly adjacent to the main campus of the Connecticut Children's Medical Center.
Western Connecticut Health Network operates comprehensive post-graduate medical education programs in anesthesiology, cardiovascular (fellowship), dentistry, internal medicine, obstetrics/gynecology, pathology, psychiatry and surgery, as well as allied health schools and training in medical records, medical technology, radiologic technology, surgical technology and dietetics.
Connecticut Valley Hospital in Middletown, Connecticut, is a public hospital operated by the state of Connecticut to treat people with mental illness. It was historically known as Connecticut General Hospital for the Insane. It is a 100-acre (40 ha) historic district that was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1985. [1]
Stamford Hospital was founded by Judge John Clason. [5] Clason was also a farmer and served as a state legislator, town assessor and school board member. [5] After consultation with Edwin L. Scofield, the second mayor of Stamford, regarding possible philanthropies, Clason sold some of his land for $45,000 to get the initial funding for the hospital. [6]