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In 1918, the Filipinos began managing the hospital. From 1930 to 1931, San Lazaro Hospital's insane patients were admitted to the National Mental Hospital and in 1949, the hospital's patients with leprosy were moved to the Tala Leprosarium which later became known as the Dr. Jose N. Rodriguez Memorial Hospital. [2]
Hospital of the Infant Jesus – Laong Laan Street, Sampaloc; Jose R. Reyes Memorial Medical Center – San Lazaro Compound, Rizal Avenue, Santa Cruz; Justice Jose Abad Santos General Hospital – Numancia St. Binondo Manila; Manila Doctors Hospital – 667 United Nations Avenue, Ermita
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The insane asylum hospital was built under Philippine Public Works Act No. 3258 at a 46-hectare (110-acre) location in Barrio Mauway, Mandaluyong, Rizal near the City of Manila. Patients from the San Lazaro Hospital were transferred to the National Center for Mental Health in 1928. Patients from the City Sanitarium were transferred in 1935.
Quezon City General Hospital; National Center for Mental Health; Philippine Orthopedic Center; San Lazaro Hospital; Dr. Jose Fabella Memorial Hospital; Ospital ng Maynila; Mandaluyong City Medical Center; Gat. Andres Bonifacio Memorial Medical Center; PCHS is also affiliated with the following health centers for the community involvement of its ...
In 1900, he became a resident physician in the Leper Department at San Lazaro Hospital. [3] [4] He was later appointed to the Philippine civil service under Secretary of the Interior Dean Conant Worcester. [11] In 1903, Mercado passed his medical board exam and spent the majority of his career at the hospital. [6] He died in 1933 in Manila. [6]
The San Lorenzo Ruiz General Hospital is a government hospital in the Philippines with an authorized bed capacity of two hundred (200). [1] It is located in Malabon , Metro Manila . References