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Kings County Hospital was born of necessity, dedicated to caring for the underprivileged of Brooklyn. In 1824, New York State established a law requiring several counties, including the County of Kings (Brooklyn), to purchase lands to be used exclusively to house the poor, deferring all potential real estate taxes which could be levied on the land.
Raritan Valley Hospital, Green Brook, New Jersey [4] Riverdell Hospital, Oradell (closed 1981, demolished 1984) Senator Garrett W. Hagedorn Psychiatric Hospital, Lebanon Township; South Amboy Medical Center, South Amboy (now medical offices) Union Hospital, Union (remains open as a satellite emergency department "SLED")
Kings Highway Hospital, Brooklyn. See Mount Sinai Brooklyn, in the section on hospitals in Brooklyn above. Kingston Avenue Hospital, Brooklyn. opened in 1891 as Hospital for Contagious Diseases; absorbed by Kings County Hospital Center in 1955. [88] Kingsway Hospital, 4422 Avenue J, Brooklyn; [89] [90] previously Mayflower Hospital.
The Valley Hospital is a 370-bed, acute-care, not-for-profit hospital in Paramus, New Jersey, United States, in the heart of Bergen County. Valley staff includes more than 1,100 physicians, 3,700 employees, and 3,000 volunteers. In 2020, Valley recorded 41,345 admissions, 51,792 emergency department visits, and 3,528 births. [1]
New Jersey Hospital Association 39°50′38″N 75°09′00″W / 39.844°N 75.150°W / 39.844; - This article relating to a hospital in New Jersey is a stub .
In June 2008, the plaintiffs in the May 2007 lawsuit released a video of Esmin Green, a 49-year-old patient, dying on the floor of a waiting room in King County Hospital after waiting to be seen by at the psychiatric emergency department for more than 24 hours. [22]
Dr. Elaine Batchlor, chief executive of MLK Community Healthcare, walks around the exterior of the emergency department at MLK Community Hospital in South Los Angeles on Jan. 2, 2023.
The facility first opened in 1916 as the Bergen County Isolation Hospital, [2] housing patients with tuberculosis and other contagious diseases. It later became known as Bergen Pines, inspired by the planting of more than 1,000 young pine trees donated in 1924 by Hackensack's Pioneer Masonic Lodge.