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Gundersen Health's flagship hospital, Gundersen Lutheran Medical Center, is located in La Crosse and is a teaching hospital with 325 beds and a Level II Trauma and Emergency Center. The hospital received Healthgrades America's 50 Best Hospitals recognition in 2015 and 2017 placing it in the top 1% nationally.
Adolf Gundersen (October 8, 1865 – August 28, 1938) was a Norwegian born, American physician and founder of Gundersen Lutheran Medical Center. [ 1 ] [ 2 ] [ 3 ] Background
Lutheran Medical Center may refer to: Lutheran Medical Center (Colorado) , in Wheat Ridge, Colorado Gundersen Lutheran Medical Center , in La Crosse, Wisconsin
The medical school was proposed in 1848 and a two-year basic science course began in 1907. Charles R. Bardeen was the first dean of the medical school. The first four-year class matriculated in 1925, [2] and the entire UWSMPH moved into the state-of-the-art Health Sciences Learning Center in 2004.
Gundersen may refer to: Gundersen (surname), people with the surname Gundersen; The Gundersen method, a method of competition in Nordic combined skiing devised by Gunder Gundersen; Gundersen Lutheran Medical Center, a tertiary healthcare facility in La Crosse, Wisconsin; the Gundersen flap, a surgical procedure developed by Trygve Gundersen
A medical test is a medical procedure performed to detect, diagnose, or monitor diseases, disease processes, susceptibility, or to determine a course of treatment. The tests are classified by speciality field, conveying in which ward of a hospital or by which specialist doctor these tests are usually performed.
Main Hall, now known as Maurice O. Graff Main Hall, is the original campus building. The university was founded as the La Crosse State Normal School in 1909, the eighth of nine state normal schools established in Wisconsin between 1866 and 1916 for teacher preparation. [15]
The Lutheran antigen systems is a classification of human blood based on the presence of substances called Lutheran antigens on the surfaces of red blood cells. There are 19 known Lutheran antigens. [1] The name Lutheran stems from a blood donor's misspelled last name, reportedly named Lutteran or Lutheran.