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Iloilo Mission Hospital Medical Center (IMH Medical Center) - To further upgrade its services in the changing times and to keep up with Iloilo's 21st-century economic surge, with major hospitals in the metro upgrading their facilities, Iloilo Mission Hospital launched the Iloilo Mission Hospital Medical Center in 2013. However, the ...
Mandurriao, Iloilo City, Iloilo, Western Visayas, Philippines Coordinates 10°43′08″N 122°32′30″E / 10.71876°N 122.54180°E / 10.71876; 122
E. Lopez St., Montinola, Jaro, Iloilo City University Western Visayas Medical Center: Q. Abeto Street, Mandurriao, Iloilo City DOH Retained Corazon Locsin Montelibano Memorial Regional Hospital: Lacson-Burgos Sts., Bacolod City, Negros Occidental DOH Retained
The Don Jose S. Monfort Medical Center, formerly known as Barotac Nuevo Municipal Hospital, was established as a 10-bed hospital in Barotac Nuevo, Iloilo, following the approval of Batasang Pambansa Bilang 303 on November 14, 1982. The hospital was constructed by the Ministry of Public Works and completed in 1985.
A milestone for the WVSU happened when the Department of Health Bureau of Health Facilities and Services and the Board of Regents through Board Resolution No. 76 series of 2001, dated November 29, 2001, approved the hospital to become the West Visayas State University Medical Center.
The Iloilo City Hall is the first green building in the Visayas, [2] which features a solar powered air-conditioning system, a rooftop garden, and a rain harvesting area. [3] Lin-ay Sang Iloilo (Lady of Iloilo) at the dome of Iloilo City Hall, seen from its rooftop. Lin-ay sang Iloilo (Lady of Iloilo), an 18-foot (5.5 m) bronze
Dr. Henry S. Waters, the postwar director of Iloilo Mission Hospital and also the principal of the Iloilo Mission Hospital School of Nursing in 1946–1947, pressed for the offering, with Central Philippine College (2nd precursor of Central Philippine University), a collegiate course leading to the Bachelor of Science in Nursing degree. The ...
Municipal government in the Philippines is divided into three – independent cities, component cities, and municipalities (sometimes referred to as towns). Several cities across the country are "independent cities" which means that they are not governed by a province, even though like Iloilo City the provincial capitol might be in the city.