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Hospital name Municipality Census Metropolitan Area Year open Year closed Last bed count Fate of hospital Saint John General Hospital: Saint John: 1931 c. 1985: Demolished in 1995 Saint John Public Hospital: Saint John: 1865 c. 1930
defunct hospital Humboldt District Hospital: Humboldt: Saskatoon: Indian Head Hospital: Indian Head: Regina Qu'Appelle: Indian Hospital: Fort Qu'Appelle: Regina Qu'Appelle: defunct Jim Pattison Children's Hospital: Saskatoon: Saskatoon: Kamsack Union Hospital: Kamsack: Sunrise Health Region: L. Gervais Memorial Health Centre: Goodsoil: Prairie ...
Valley Regional Hospital; Lunenburg. Fishermen's Memorial Hospital [10] Middleton. Soldiers Memorial Hospital; New Glasgow. Aberdeen Hospital [11] Sheet Harbour. Eastern Shore Memorial Hospital [12] Springhill All Saints Springhill Hospital [13] Sydney. Cape Breton Regional Hospital; Sydney Mines. Harbourview Hospital [14] Tatamagouche. Lillian ...
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Saint John Regional Hospital is a Canadian hospital in Saint John, New Brunswick. Operated by Horizon Health Network , Saint John Regional Hospital opened in 1982, replacing the Saint John General Hospital and West Saint John Community Hospital facilities, creating the largest single health care facility in the province.
AppyWay (formerly AppyParking and Yellow Line Parking) is a technology company that provides parking apps and services for drivers. It was founded in London in 2013 by Dan Hubert initially under the name of Yellow Line Parking. It produces software that shows on-street and off-street parking options in major cities in the UK.
New SHNB under construction, July 2016. Built between 1911 and 1913, the facility in North Battleford was the first mental health hospital to be built in Saskatchewan, Canada. [12] It had 156 beds. [13] Prior to its establishment, patients were sent to hospitals in Manitoba. The first superintendent of the hospital was James Walter MacNeill ...
The hospital experienced severe overcrowding during the late 1940s and early 1950s as the number of patients increased dramatically following the war when soldiers were repatriated to New Brunswick. Consequently, the provincial government decided to fund the province's second psychiatric hospital , the Restigouche Hospital which opened its ...