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In 1945 it was named Wayne County General Hospital and Infirmary at Eloise, Michigan. In 1974 it had two divisions - the Wayne County General Hospital and the Wayne County Psychiatric Hospital. In 1979 it was officially called Wayne County General Hospital with the psychiatric division closing in 1982. [5]
The hospital is an American College of Surgeons verified Level 1 Adult and Level II Pediatric Trauma Center [4] with an onsite helipad to transport critically ill patients from within the region. [5] The hospital is ranked on the U.S. News & World Report as the #2 best in Michigan after University of Michigan Hospital. [6]
After Munson's retirement, James Decker Munson Hospital was established in his honor on the grounds in 1926, and was operated by the state well after his death and into the 1950s. It was then replaced by Munson Medical Center in the 1950s, the largest hospital in northern Michigan and one of the largest in the state. A portrait of Dr. Munson ...
Henry Ford Hospital (HFH) is an 877-bed tertiary care hospital, education and research complex at the western edge of the New Center area in Detroit, Michigan. [3] The flagship facility for the Henry Ford Health System, it was one of the first hospitals in the United States to use a standard fee schedule and favor private or semi-private rooms over large wards.
Corewell Health Butterworth Hospital is a hospital in the Grand Rapids Medical Mile in downtown Grand Rapids, Michigan. Founded in 1875 as St. Mark's Home and Hospital, begun by parishioners of St. Mark's Episcopal Church, the current Butterworth Hospital is a subsidiary of Corewell Health .
The expansion increases the number of beds at the hospital by 75 percent and makes the hospital the largest of Michigan's three children's hospitals. Every inpatient room is private, in contrast to the old facility, which had mostly double occupancy rooms. [18] The new hospital has 16 operating rooms and two interventional radiology rooms.
The new hospital will be four stories, have 174,000 square feet, 56 acuity adaptable beds, 18 existing Short Stay Unit beds and eight licensed operating rooms. The total investment is $238.2 million.
University of Michigan Health - Sparrow Lansing was founded in 1896, when the Women's Hospital Association supported one doctor and one nurse out of a rented house. In 1910, Lansing developer Edward W. Sparrow donated land on East Michigan Avenue near the Michigan State Capitol and $100,000 to help build the hospital. The hospital opened in 1912.