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Allina Health (/ ə ˈ l aɪ n ə / ə-LY-nə) [1] is a nonprofit health care system based in Minneapolis, Minnesota, United States.It owns or operates 12 hospitals and more than 90 clinics throughout Minnesota and western Wisconsin.
MetroHealth is an academic medical center and has been affiliated with the Case Western Reserve University School of Medicine since 1914. All active staff physicians hold faculty appointments at CWRU. [19] The system has 47 residency and fellowship programs and trains more than 2,000 students, residents and fellows each year.
Shannon Tavarez was the only child of Odiney Brown, a human resources administrator, [1] and one of the daughters of a Dominican man with the surname of "Tavarez". [2] She was a native and resident of Bellerose, Queens, [3] and an honors student at P.S. 176 [4] as well as a student of vocals and piano at the Harlem School of the Arts. [5]
Still, he relapsed five days after graduating from the clinic. It would take him another year and a half, along with a platoon of understanding adults, before he found sobriety through another 12-step program. Now, as a physician, he knew he had to track down the clinic’s dropouts and their families, and ask them what Hazelden was doing wrong.
Stewart Krentzman (born 1951) is an American educator and business executive who serves as an adjunct professor at the New York University Stern School of Business in the executive, full and part-time graduate programs. [1]
Texas Health Resources operates, owns, or has joint ventures involving over 350 facilities, including outpatient centers, satellite emergency rooms, surgery centers, fitness centers, and imaging centers. Fortune magazine ranked Texas Health Resources 15th on its 'Top 100 Companies to Work For' list in 2020, based on employee surveys. [1]
James Augustine Shannon (August 9, 1904 – May 20, 1994) was an American nephrologist who served as director of National Institutes of Health (NIH) from August 1, 1955 to August 31, 1968. [1] In 1962 he was awarded the Public Welfare Medal from the National Academy of Sciences , of which he was a member.
Renee N. Salas is an American medical doctor who is an attending physician in Emergency Medicine at Massachusetts General Hospital, Assistant Professor of Emergency Medicine at the Harvard Medical School, and the Yerby Fellow at the Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health.