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St. John's Smithtown Hospital was purchased by the Catholic Health Services of Long Island (now known as Catholic Health) on February 29, 2000, and renamed St. Catherine of Siena Medical Center [14] after the 14th-century Catholic saint, theologian, and nurse Catherine Benincasa.
The organization provides health services through their hospitals, primary care centers, diagnostic and treatment centers, home care agencies, long-term care facilities and other programs. The system brings together more than 9,000 associates and 1,300 physicians to the Western New York market. [1]
Good Samaritan University Hospital (formerly Good Samaritan Hospital Medical Center) is a 537-bed non-profit teaching hospital on Long Island located in West Islip, New York. The hospital contains 100 nursing home beds [ 1 ] as well as operates an adult Level I trauma center [ 4 ] and a pediatric Level II trauma center .
In 1977, New York City Comptroller Harrison Goldin performed an audit of New York City's private foster-care agencies based on a random sampling of five, of which the Angel Guardian Home was one, and issued a stinging report summarizing the findings, alleging that the agencies were essentially warehousing children, and making little if any effort to find permanent homes for them.
Pope Pius VII in 1808 erected the Diocese of New York, taking all of New York State from the Diocese of Baltimore. [6] Catholic priests started appearing in Long Island in the mid-19th century, founding missions and parishes. The first Catholic Church in Nassau County was St. Brigid in Westbury, founded in 1840. [7]
Catholic Guardian Services is the product of three separate organizations, with discrete histories but similar missions. Each had the common goal of helping disadvantaged people and communities of New York City. The history of Catholic Guardian Services contains several narratives that eventually converge after a series of administrative mergers.
Services; Emergency department: None: Beds: 365 [1] Speciality: Long-term acute care hospital (LTACH) Public transit access: New York City Subway: trains at 125th Street New York City Bus: Bx15, M35, M60 SBS, M98, M100, M101 Metro-North Railroad: Hudson Line Harlem Line New Haven Line at Harlem–125th Street: History
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