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The fourth floor addition was completed in 1966 and brought the hospital's bed capacity to 126 with 22 pediatric beds and 19 medical-surgical beds. In the late 1970s the emergency room began serving patients 24 hours a day. The third floor of the hospital was renovated and the first Intensive/Coronary Care Unit opened in 1979.
St. Francis Hospital Ohio Valley Surgical Hospital Springfield: Clark: 24 x 2009 – OhioHealth Arthur G.H. Bing, MD, Cancer Center Columbus: Franklin: 23 x 2012 – OhioHealth Berger Hospital Circleville: Pickaway: 83 x 1930 Berger Hospital OhioHealth Doctors Hospital: Columbus: Franklin: 213 x 1940 Doctors Hospital OhioHealth Dublin Methodist ...
Bellefontaine is the center of the Bellefontaine Micropolitan Statistical Area, as defined by the U.S. Census Bureau. This micropolis consists solely of Logan County, Ohio . The 2000 census [ 4 ] found 46,005 people in the micropolis, making it the 260th most populous such area in the United States.
In 1988, Mercy Hospital joined the U.S. Health network, and over time became Southern Ohio Medical Center, which eventually regained independent status. [3] In 1986, Marion General Hospital joined the system, allowing U.S. Health to become one of the Midwest's largest health systems. In 1988, Grant Medical Center became a member. [3]
(The Center Square) – Ohio is sending an additional $750,000 in taxpayer funds to move a primary care facility in East Palestine to a new location. The money is expected to help East Liverpool ...
Mercy Health, [2] formerly Catholic Health Partners, is a Catholic health care system with locations in Ohio and Kentucky. [3] [4] [5] Cincinnati-based Mercy Health operates more than 250 healthcare organizations in Ohio and Kentucky. Mercy Health is the second largest health system in Ohio and the state's fourth-largest employer. [6]
Charles Elmer Sawyer (January 24, 1860 – September 23, 1924), was a homeopathic physician who was the longtime personal doctor to U.S. President Warren G. Harding and First Lady Florence Kling Harding. Sawyer is often blamed in the matter of Harding's death in 1923.
In early August 2009, construction workers broke ground on the hospital, [2] at a cost of $135 million. [3] Soin Medical Center was built in response to Dayton, Ohio's rapidly growing suburbs and to serve some of its more profitable customers. It is the only hospital in a 10-mile radius which is home to more than 131,000 residents. [4]