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Swedish Health Services (formerly Swedish Medical Center) is a nonprofit healthcare provider in the Seattle metropolitan area.It operates five hospital campuses (in the Seattle neighborhoods of First Hill, Cherry Hill and Ballard, and the cities of Edmonds and Issaquah), ambulatory care centers in the cities of Redmond and Mill Creek, and Swedish Medical Group, a network of more than 100 ...
First Hill is bounded on the west by Interstate 5, beyond which is Downtown, on the north by E. Pike and E. Madison Streets, beyond which is Capitol Hill, and on the south by Yesler Way, beyond which is the International District. The City of Seattle provides conflicting information about its eastern limit, beyond which are Cherry Hill and the ...
In 2009, The Polyclinic partnered with Swedish Medical Center to implement electronic health records. [5] In 2012, The Polyclinic Madison Center opened. [6] This location became the main hub for primary and specialty care at The Polyclinic, visible from Interstate 5. At this time, the Broadway building became a satellite location to the Madison ...
In 1908, Swedish became the first hospital to open on First Hill and was followed by Virginia Mason in 1920 and Harborview in 1931; other hospitals also opened on the hill in the early 20th century but later closed, including Cabrini Hospital, Maynard Hospital, Seattle General Hospital, and Doctors Hospital.
Swedish Medical Center Ballard: Seattle: King: 163: Providence Health (Catholic) Swedish Medical Center Cherry Hill: Seattle: King: 385 Providence Health (Catholic) Swedish Medical Center Edmonds: Edmonds: Snohomish: 217 IV [2] Providence Health (Catholic) 1964 Swedish Medical Center First Hill: Seattle: King: 697 Providence Health (Catholic ...
Front entrance of Harborview Medical Center. Harborview Medical Center is the designated Disaster Control Hospital for Seattle and King County, on account of it having the only Level I adult and pediatric trauma and burn center in Washington state; [2] it also serves the states of Alaska, Idaho, and Montana. [3]
In 1987, the center began exploring possible new homes to replace its 9-building campus on First Hill that it was set to outgrow. [30] [31] A site in the South Lake Union neighborhood, envisioned by the city as a future high-tech and biotechnology hub, [32] was chosen in September 1988 after a deal to move to Fremont fell through earlier that year.
Seattle General Hospital was inaugurated on July 1, 1895, as a private Protestant hospital in the three-story Avon House at 2823 First Avenue. [2] In 1897, it shifted location to the Sarah B. Yesler home at Second Avenue North and Republican Street.