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Lovelace Health System is a healthcare company which operates six hospitals in New Mexico, five in Albuquerque and one in Roswell. It is one of New Mexico's largest employers [1] with 3,659 employees as of 2020. [2] The company grew out of the Lovelace Clinic founded in 1922, one of the pioneers of group medical practice in the United States.
Presbyterian Healthcare Services is a private not-for-profit [1] health care system and health care provider in the State of New Mexico. [2] It owns and operates 9 hospitals in 7 New Mexico communities as well as Presbyterian Homes & Services, an organization providing retirement and senior care. . [3] It also operates Presbyterian Health Plan.
The name was officially changed to University of New Mexico Hospital in 1979. The hospital has expanded several times over the years. [4] The Mental Health Center originally opened in 1969. The UNM Cancer Center was established in 1975, and is currently the only NCI Comprehensive Cancer Center in the state of New Mexico. [5]
Albuquerque, New Mexico – Racial and ethnic composition Note: the US Census treats Hispanic/Latino as an ethnic category. This table excludes Latinos from the racial categories and assigns them to a separate category. Hispanics/Latinos may be of any race. Race / Ethnicity (NH = Non-Hispanic) Pop 2000 [79] Pop 2010 [80] Pop 2020 [78] % 2000 % ...
National Register of Historic Places; New Mexico State Register of Cultural Properties 1454 University of New Mexico Hospital 1954 (additions 1974, 1983, 1991) Ferguson and Stevens, 1974: Flatow, Moore, Bryan, and Fairburn, 1983: W.C. Kruger and Assoc., 1991: Dean-Kreuger and Assoc. 235 North Campus University of New Mexico Hospital
The Old St. Joseph Hospital is a historic hospital building in Albuquerque, New Mexico. It was built in 1929–30 as an expansion of the original St. Joseph Hospital, which opened in 1902. [ 3 ] The hospital was run by the Sisters of Charity of Cincinnati and continued to grow with a new 11-story building completed in 1968 that replaced the ...
The National Women's Health Network published a bimonthly newsletter, The Women's Health Activist. The Women's Health Activist has been in circulation since 1976, but was known as the Network News up until 2001. The newsletter included articles by NWHN board members, staff members, and contributors from diverse organizations and institutions.
The need for an additional area code for the state had been discussed since at least 2000, [3] but the PRC's initial votes for Albuquerque and Santa Fe to switch to a new area code and the rest of the state to keep the old 505 area code (including the Farmington and Gallup areas that are now part of the current 505 area code) were met with ...