Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Providence Willamette Falls Medical Center (Willamette Falls) is a not-for-profit acute care hospital operated by Providence Health & Services in Oregon City, Oregon, United States. Established in 1954 as Doctors' Hospital, the hospital moved to its current location in 1961 and has 143 licensed beds at its 243,000-square-foot (22,600 m 2 ...
Providence Hood River Memorial Hospital: 25: 25: 3 John Day: Grant: Blue Mountain Hospital: 16: 25: 4 Klamath Falls: Klamath: Sky Lakes Medical Center (formerly: Merle West Medical Center) 131: 176: 3 La Grande: Union: Grande Ronde Hospital: 25: 25: 4 Lakeview: Lake: Lake District Hospital: 24: 24: 4 Lebanon: Linn: Samaritan Lebanon Community ...
Providence St. Vincent Medical Center, is a not for profit, acute care teaching hospital in an unincorporated section of Washington County, Oregon, in the West Haven-Sylvan area north of Beaverton, Oregon and west of Portland, Oregon, United States [a] – and within the Portland metropolitan area.
Search. Search. Appearance. Donate; ... Providence Hospital may refer to: ... Providence Willamette Falls Medical Center in Oregon City, Oregon;
Providence Newberg Medical Center is a non-profit [1] acute care hospital in Newberg, Oregon, United States. Opened at a different location as Newberg Community Hospital , a new 40-licensed-hospital-bed and Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design (LEED)-certified facility was opened in 2006, the first gold certified hospital in the nation.
The town of Willamette, Oregon was incorporated on October 5, 1908, [1] [2] and is located directly West across the Willamette River from Oregon City, Oregon and upstream from the Willamette Falls. The area was first called Willamette Falls, but later shortened to Willamette. The first mayor of Willamette was James Downey. [1] The town ...
Emanuel started what it originally called the Children's Hospital in 1960. [1] Ronald McDonald House Charities opened a house at the hospital in 1997. [2] Construction on a new nine-story tower for the hospital began in 2007. [3]
The tech bust of the early 2000s caused Oregon to lose many of the 43,000 jobs lost between 2000 and 2003. Between 2004 and 2007, Oregon's and the nation's economies grew based on increases in construction and services. Construction alone added 21,000 jobs during the period. [8]