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J and K Wings viewed from the green roof of the Foege Building loading dock. The Warren G. Magnuson Health Sciences Center is a university hospital part of the University of Washington campus in Seattle and one of the largest buildings in the United States with a total floor area of 5.8 million square feet (540,000 m 2). [1]
The UWMC opened on May 5, 1959, and became home to the world's first pain center and also the world's first long-term kidney dialysis which was developed by UW professor Belding H. Scribner, M.D. The 2007 issue of U.S. News & World Report's "America's Best Hospitals" ranked the UWMC 10th out of 5,000 hospitals nationwide. [2]
Today, South Campus is the location of UW's health sciences and natural sciences facilities, including the UW Medical Center and the Magnuson Health Sciences Center as well as locations for instruction and research in oceanography, bioengineering, biology, genome sciences, hydraulics, and comparative medicine.
Mary Gates Hall opened in May 2000, and in September 2003, the UW law school relocated to the $74 million William H. Gates Hall on the northwest corner of campus, and the $90 million UW Medical Center surgery pavilion opened for operation. The $72 million Paul G. Allen Center for Computer Science & Engineering opened in October 2003.
The University of Wisconsin-Madison affiliated health system announced Tuesday it has struck a deal with Leo Cancer Care, a Middleton-based medical products company, to be the first medical center ...
Specifically, the system would provide a $500 tuition refund to any student enrolled at a UW System campus who worked at least 50 hours in a Wisconsin hospital, clinic, nursing home, long-term ...
The University of Washington School of Medicine is the medical school of the University of Washington, a public research university in Seattle, Washington.According to U.S. News & World Report ' s 2022 Best Graduate School rankings, University of Washington School of Medicine ranked #1 in the nation for primary care education, and #7 for research.
UW Health serves over 950,000 patients per year, and employs over 24,000 employees across seven hospitals, 4 medical centers, 90+ clinics/specialty clinics, 3 urgent cares, 4 behavioral health centers and 1 community service center., making it the second-largest employer in Madison (after UW–Madison) and in Wisconsin.