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  3. Mayo Clinic Health System - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mayo_Clinic_Health_System

    Mayo Clinic Health System is a system of community-based medical facilities. It is owned by Mayo Clinic and was founded in 1992. The organization focuses on providing medical care in rural communities in Minnesota, Iowa, and Wisconsin. As of 2022, its facilities include 16 hospitals, 53 multispecialty clinics and one mobile health clinic. [2]

  4. Mayo Clinic - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mayo_Clinic

    Mayo Clinic is a nonprofit hospital system with campuses in Rochester, Minnesota; Scottsdale and Phoenix, Arizona; and Jacksonville, Florida. [22] [23] Mayo Clinic employs 76,000 people, including more than 7,300 physicians and clinical residents and over 66,000 allied health staff, as of 2022. [5] In addition, Mayo Clinic partially owns and ...

  5. Cleveland Clinic - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cleveland_Clinic

    Cleveland Clinic. / 41.502595; -81.621066. Cleveland Clinic is an American nonprofit academic medical center based in Cleveland, Ohio. [2] Owned and operated by the Cleveland Clinic Foundation, an Ohio nonprofit corporation, Cleveland Clinic was founded in 1921 by a group of faculty and alumni from the Case Western Reserve University School of ...

  6. Mayo Clinic Hospital (Rochester) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mayo_Clinic_Hospital...

    Mayo Clinic, Rochester, was ranked in the top 10 in all but one of 16 specialties, in the top 4 in 13 specialties, and was the #1 ranked hospital in 8 of the 12 data-driven specialties. This year U.S. News expanded their common procedures and conditions list to 9 individual measures, and Mayo was one of fewer than 70 hospitals to score High ...

  7. Mayo Clinic Health System Event Center - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mayo_Clinic_Health_System...

    The Mayo Clinic Health System Event Center is a 5,280-seat (8,200 for concerts) multi-purpose arena in Mankato, Minnesota, built in 1994 [2] and opened in early 1995. It is home to the Minnesota State Mavericks men's ice hockey team and women's ice hockey team, and also hosts musical performances, conventions and other events.

  8. Lovelace Health System - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lovelace_Health_System

    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 with 3,659 employees as of 2020. The company grew out of the Lovelace Clinic founded in 1922, one of the pioneers of group medical practice in the United States.

  9. WinnMed - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/WinnMed

    WinnMed. / 43.29473; -91.77377. WinnMed, known as Winneshiek Medical Center until June 2023, [2] is a 25-bed not-for-profit hospital located in Decorah, Iowa. It is part of the Mayo Clinic Health System. WinnMed is the second largest critical access hospital in Iowa. [3] [4]

  10. Mayo Clinic Arizona - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mayo_Clinic_Arizona

    Mayo Clinic Hospital (Phoenix) / 33.659355; -111.956432  ( Bhagwan Mahaveer Cancer Hospital & Research Centre) Arizona State University. Mayo Clinic Alix School of Medicine. Mayo Clinic Arizona is a multi-campus medical clinic and tertiary medical center in Phoenix, Arizona. Its two main campuses are the outpatient clinic building, situated ...

  11. Johns Hopkins Hospital - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Johns_Hopkins_Hospital

    The Johns Hopkins Hospital (JHH) is the teaching hospital and biomedical research facility of Johns Hopkins School of Medicine in Baltimore, Maryland.Founded in 1889, Johns Hopkins Hospital and its school of medicine are considered to be the founding institutions of modern American medicine and the birthplace of numerous famed medical traditions, including rounds, residents, and house staff.

  12. History of Cleveland Clinic - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_Cleveland_Clinic

    The Cleveland Clinic had its roots in the Lakeside Unit, [1] [2] an American First World War medical-surgical unit consisting of volunteers from Cleveland's Western Reserve University Lakeside Hospital, (now part of the University Hospitals medical system), organized and led by George W. Crile, MD the hospital's chief of surgery.