Hospitals Sentence Examples

hospitals
  • There are two hospitals in the town.

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  • There are several infirmaries and hospitals, and a sanatorium for children.

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  • The inhabitants are totally ruined, the hospitals overflow with sick, and famine is everywhere.

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  • Among hospitals are the Italian, the Homoeopathic, the National for the paralysed and epileptic, the Alexandra for children with hip disease, and the Hospital for sick children.

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  • I told him we were trying to trace the electric bike by its model but asked about checking hospitals.

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  • Among many hospitals, the county hospital (5828), "open to the sick and lame poor of every country and nation," may be mentioned.

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  • In the 6th century the emperor Justinian erected a magnificent basilica at Jerusalem, in honour of the Virgin Mary, and attached to it two hospitals, one for the reception of pilgrims and one for the accommodation of the sick poor.

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  • Amongst the more important buildings for ecclesiastical and philanthropic purposes erected to the north of the city since 1860 are the Russian cathedral, hospice and hospital; the French hospital of St Louis, and hospice and church of St Augustine; the German schools, orphanages and hospitals; the new hospital and industrial school of the London mission to the Jews; the Abyssinian church; the church and schools of the Church missionary society; the Anglican church, college and bishop's house; the Dominican monastery, seminary and church of St Stephen; the Rothschild hospital and girls' school; and the industrial school and workshops of the Alliance Israelite.

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  • It is provided with a jetty, is the sea terminus of the railway systems, the residence of the governor, and has churches, schools, hospitals and large business houses.

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  • From that day he gave himself up to the service of the lepers and the hospitals.

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  • The decrease of the disease is a direct result of the efforts made to combat it, in the form of special hospitals or pellagrosarf, economic kitchens, rural bakeries and maize-drying establishments.

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  • Between 1881 and 1898 the chief increases took place in the endowments of hospitals; orphan asylums; infant asylums; poorhouses; almshouses; voluntary workhouses; and institutes for the blind.

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  • Part of these sums is given to hospitals, and part spent directly by the communal and provincial authorities.

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  • Of the sum spent by the provincial authorities, over half goes to lunatic asylums and over a quarter to the maintenance of foundling hospitals.

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  • New parishes were created, old parishes were improved, the property of the suppressed religious corporations was assigned to charitable and educational institutions and to hospitals, while property having no special application was used to form a charitable and religious fund.

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  • There are four hospitals, each under a resident medical officer, under the general supervision of a senior officer of the Indian medical service, and medical aid is given free to the whole population.

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  • A beautiful house of the 16th century belonged to one Thomas Rogers, whose daughter was mother of John Harvard, the founder of Harvard College, U.S.A. Among public buildings are the town hall, originally dated 1633, rebuilt 1767, and altered 186 3; market house, corn exchange and three hospitals.

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  • Two miles inland is Ancon, in the Canal Zone, in which are the hospitals of the Isthmian Canal Commission and the largest hotel on the isthmus.

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  • State aid is given to the hospitals at Vicksburg and Natchez.

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  • During the Russo-Japanese War he served in the Red Cross and in the Municipal Union for the organization of hospitals; he was left to take care of the Russian wounded after the battle of Moukden, and showed much dignity and efficiency in the performance of his arduous duties.

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  • There are two hospitals.

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  • The city's charitable institutions include the Memorial (1903), Virginia Sheltering Arms (1889) and St Luke's hospitals, the Retreat for the Sick (1877), the Eye, Nose, Ear and Throat Infirmary (1880), the Confederate Soldiers' Home (1884), supported jointly by the state and the city, a Home for Needy Confederate Women (1900), the City Almshouse and Hospital, and several orphanages and homes for the aged.

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  • The town has two hospitals, several schools, and is the headquarters of important insurance societies.

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  • The 1232 convicts " on hand" at the close of 1908 were held in 38 camps, 4 being the minimum, and 160 the maximum number, at a camp. In 1908 two central hospitals for the prisoners were maintained by the lessee company.

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  • Rockford is the see of a Roman Catholic bishop. In and near the city there are two hospitals and three sanatoriums. Manufacturing is facilitated by good water-power, supplied by a dam across the Rock river about 800 ft.

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  • The town now possesses an exchange, a large theatre, a gymnasium, a naval school, municipal buildings and several hospitals and charitable institutions erected by private munificence.

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  • In 1884 the port became a first-class naval station; and naval barracks, warehouses, offices, hospitals, &c., were established here.

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  • The city has two well-equipped hospitals, a home for aged women, a home for the friendless, and four parks.

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  • The principal other buildings are the court house, government buildings (formerly a Jesuit monastery), episcopal palace, grammar school (once attended by Erasmus), a prison, hospitals, arsenal and barracks.

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  • The United States maintains here naval and marine hospitals, and the state a soldiers' home.

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  • Towards the close of his life he confined his ministry to charitable institutions, hospitals and prisons, where his sympathetic discourses and conciliatory manners were always effective.

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  • Lauban has a Roman Catholic and two Evangelical churches, a town hall, dating from 1541, a conventual house of the order of St Magdalene, dating from the 14th century, a municipal, library and museum, two hospitals, an orphanage and several schools.

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  • In 1909 the number of missionaries (including wives) was 113; organized churches, 194; members and adherents, 21,085; schools, 135; pupils, 7042; hospitals and dispensaries, 17; patients treated, 6865; subscriptions raised from Friends in Great Britain and Ireland, £26,689, besides £3245 received in the fields of work.

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  • Finally, the government sustains about two score of penal establishments, reform schools, hospitals, dispensaries and asylums, which are scattered all over the island, - every town of any considerable size having one or more of these charities.

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  • One conspicuous feature of the Bosnian land-system is the Moslem Vakuf, or ecclesiastical property, consisting of estates dedicated to such charitable purposes as poor-relief, and the endowment of mosques, schools, hospitals, cemeteries and baths.

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  • Fayetteville has two hospitals (each with a training school for nurses), and is the seat of a state coloured normal school and of the Donaldson military school.

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  • The non-Mussulman population is divided into millets, or religious communities, which are allowed the free exercise of their religion and the control of their own monasteries, schools and hospitals.

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  • The grand master of ordnance is co-equal with the minister of war, and his department is classed separately in the budget; the artillery establishments, parts of the infantry and of the technical corps, and even hospitals are placed under his direct orders.

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  • Besides the city, there are the Northern Ohio (for the insane, founded in 1855), the Cleveland general, Lake Side (endowed), St Alexis and the Charity hospitals (the last managed by Sisters of Charity).

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  • Barracks, hospitals and waterworks have been built, the military town, called Ferryville, being self-contained.

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  • About 160 estates were not to be subdivided, but preserved as funds for schools, hospitals, local institutions, etc.

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  • The church likewise exercises a far-reaching influence over the people through the beneficent work of its lay orders, and through the hospitals and asylums under its control in every part of the country.

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  • In 1738 George Watson's hospital for boys was founded; then followed the Trades' Maiden hospital for burgesses' daughters, John Watson's, Daniel Stewart's, the Orphans', Gillespie's,' Donaldson's 2 hospitals, and other institutions founded by successful merchants of the city, in which poor children of various classes were lodged, boarded and educated.

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  • During the six weeks previous to the relief, 200 deaths had occurred from disease alone, and altogether as many as 8424 were reported to have passed through the hospitals.

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  • It was with this corps that Dr. Elsie Inglis and a detachment of the Scottish Women's Hospitals served as medical unit.

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  • StMarylebone contains a great number of hospitals, among which are the Middlesex, Mortimer Street; Throat Hospital and Dental Hospital and School, Great Portland Street; Lying-in and Ophthalmic Hospitals, Marylebone Road; Samaritan Hospital for women, Seymour Street; Consumption Hospital, Margaret Street; and the Home for incurable children, St John's Wood Road.

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  • Among institutions may be mentioned the grammar school, founded in 1674, the public library and museum, and a number of hospitals and sanatoria.

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  • Although it cannot be said that the science of medicine was advanced at Salerno, still its decline was arrested at a time when every other branch of learning was rapidly falling into decay; and there can be no doubt that the observation of patients in hospitals, and probably clinical instruction, were made use of in learning and teaching.

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  • In another direction the foundations of modern medicine were being laid during the 16th century - namely, by the introduction of clinical instruction in hospitals.

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  • The method of clinical instruction in hospitals, commenced by the Italians, was introduced into Holland, where it was greatly developed, especially at Leiden, in the hands of Francis de la Bo gy, called Sylvius (1641-1672).

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  • Its public buildings are inconspicuous; they include a theatre, military barracks, hospitals, a lunatic asylum and a secondary school.

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  • Hospitals.-The Metropolitan Asylums Board, though established in 1867 purely as a poor-law authority for the relief of the sick, insane Metro- and infirm paupers, has become a central hospital authority for infectious diseases, with power to receive into politan its hospitals persons, who are not paupers, suffering from Asylums fever, smallpox or diphtheria.

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  • There are twelve fever hospitals, including northern and southern convalescent hospitals.

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  • There are three regular funds in London for the support of hospitals.

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  • Coming to Italy during an epidemic of plague, he was very diligent in tending the sick in the public hospitals at Aquapendente, Cesena and Rome, and effected many miraculous cures by entre nous, a la vie, a la mort."

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  • The hospitals and charitable institutions include St Vincent's Orphan Asylum, the Lathrop Memorial (for children of working mothers), Albany City Hospital, the Homeopathic Hospital, St Peter's Hospital, the Albany City Orphan Asylum and the House of the Good Shepherd.

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  • Several of the Florence hospitals are of great antiquity, the most important being that of Santa Maria Nuova, which, founded by Folco Portinari, the father of Dante's Beatrice, has been thoroughly renovated according to modern scientific principles.

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  • There are numerous other hospitals both general and special, a foundling hospital dating from the 13th century (Santa Maria degli Innocenti), an institute for the blind, one for the deaf and dumb, &c. Most of the hospitals and other charitable institutions are endowed, but the endowments are supplemented by private contributions.

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  • Exclusive of extensive and flourishing suburbs, the city has a circuit of 12 m.; its streets are well paved and clean; and it possesses a large number of arches, public monuments, temples, hospitals and colleges.

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  • The public buildings comprise the town hall, county buildings, mechanics' institute, academy, two fever hospitals and free library, the burgh having been the first town in Scotland to adopt the Free Library Act.

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  • Among the public buildings are several churches and hospitals (including the Jurujuba yellow-fever hospital and the Barreto isolation hospital), the government palace, a municipal theatre and a large Salesian college situated in the suburbs of Santa Rosa on an eminence overlooking the lower bay.

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  • One of the hospitals was founded by the famous Capuchin philanthropist, Father Theodosius Florentini (1808-1865), who was long the Romanist cure of Coire, and whose remains were in 1906 transferred from the cathedral here to Ingenbohl (near Schwyz), his chief foundation.

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  • There are also four other Protestant churches (of which the town church, dedicated to St Wenceslaus and restored in 1892-1894, possesses two pictures by Lucas Cranach the elder), a Roman Catholic church, a gymnasium, a modern school, an orphanage and three hospitals.

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  • There are several hospitals, one of which is a government institution.

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  • Among its many charitable institutions are a Masonic Home and School (1893), a Home for the Homeless (1867), St Elizabeth's Home (1886), St Luke's Home (1869), a Home for Aged Men and Couples (1879), Utica Orphan Asylum (1830), St Joseph's Infant Home (1893) and St John's Female Orphan Asylum (1834), both under the Sisters of Charity; the House of the Good Shepherd (1872; Protestant Episcopal); and the General (1873; City of Utica), Homeopathic (1895), St Luke's (1869; supported by the Protestant Episcopal Churches), St Elizabeth's (1866; Sisters of the Third Order of St Francis) and Faxton (1873) hospitals.

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  • There are numerous high-grade schools, musical and other learned societies and excellent hospitals.

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  • Among the charitable institutions are the Dayton state hospital (for the insane), the Miami Valley and the St Elizabeth hospitals, the Christian Deaconess, the Widows' and the Children's homes, and the Door of Hope (for homeless girls); and 1 m.

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  • He had a great master in Democritus, the originator of the doctrine of atoms, and there is every reason to believe that the various " asclepia " were very carefully conducted hospitals for the sick, possessing a curious system of case-books, in the form of votive tablets, left by the patients, on which were recorded the symptoms, treatment and result of each case.

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  • In Germany, the use of duty-free spirit is only allowed to state and municipal hospitals, and state scientific institutions, and for the manufacture of fulminates, fuzes and smokeless powders.

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  • There are efficient hospitals and asylums, a system of sanitary inspection, and modernized quarantine stations.

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  • The chief building in Des Moines is the State Capitol, erected at a cost of about $3,000,000; other important buildings are the public library (containing, in 1908, 40,415 volumes), the court house, the post office, the Iowa State Historical building, a large auditorium and two hospitals.

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  • There are barracks with accommodation for 3000 men, and civil and military hospitals.

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  • Many fine buildings are to be seen - the various public offices, the arsenal, the mint, the palaces of various princes and, in addition to these, schools, hospitals, markets and Christian churches of many denominations, chiefly Roman Catholic. There are four railway stations in Bangkok,the termini of the lines which connect the provinces with the capital.

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  • Tarrasa is now mostly a modern industrial town, with fine public buildings, including the royal college, built in 1864 for 450 students besides day scholars, the school of arts and handicrafts, the industrial institute, chamber of commerce, hospitals, town hall, clubs, theatres and many large textile factories.

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  • In the autumn of 1813 the hospitals of Berlin were filled with sick and wounded from the campaign.

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  • He was an ardent social reformer; he secured the abolition of corporal punishment in the schools, the suppression of lotteries, of houses of ill-fame and of obscene literature; he instituted reforms in the hospitals, and insisted on the honours of public burial for the poor.

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  • The principal buildings and institutions are the town hall and municipal buildings, the Princess Alice Memorial and other hospitals, a free library and, among many high-class schools, Eastbourne College for boys, founded in 1867.

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  • It contains a number of commodious official residences, churches, hospitals, a laboratory, covered market, &c. The port is protected by a breakwater and provided with a pier on which is the customs-house.

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  • Three more hospitals for consumptives were planned in 1909.

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  • Under the supervision of the state board of insanity, and each under the government of a board of seven trustees (of whom two are women) are state hospitals for the insane at Worcester (1833), Taunton, Northampton, Danvers, Westboro and Medford, a state colony for the insane at Gardner, a state hospital for epileptics at Palmer, a state school for the feebleminded at Waltham (governed by six trustees), a state school at Wrentham, state " hospital cottages for children " (1882) at Baldwinville (governed by five trustees), and the Foxboro state hospital for dipsomaniacs and insane.

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  • The city is likewise generously provided with hospitals and asylums.

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  • Public Institutions, &c. - Tunis is furnished with well-equipped hospitals and a large asylum for aged people kept by the Little Sisters of the Poor.

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  • Large sums of money were collected to build hospitals and churches among their valleys, and they were looked upon as the possible centre of a Protestant church in Italy.

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  • Prisons, Poor Law, Charities, &c. - Penal institutions for sane adults, except reformatories for women, are under the general supervision of a state commission of prisons; hospitals for the insane are under the general supervision of a state commission in lunacy; and all other charitable and penal institutions, maintained wholly or in part by the state, or by any county, city or town within the state, are under the general supervision of a state board of charities.

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  • In 1910 there were fourteen state hospitals (corresponding to fourteen state hospital districts) for the poor and indigent insane; these were at Utica, Willard, Poughkeepsie, Buffalo, Middletown (homoeopathic), Binghamton, Rochester, Ogdensburg, Gowanda (homoeopathic), Flatbush, Ward's Island, King's Park, Central Islip and Yorktown.

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  • There were also in 1910 two hospitals for the criminal insane, at Matteawan and Dannemora.

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  • In the park is the fine Colombo Museum, founded by Sir William Gregory l; and near the neighbouring Campbell Park are the handsome buildings of a number of institutions, such as Wesley College, and the General, Victoria Memorial Eye and other hospitals.

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  • Women's settlements probably are more general in the United States than in Great Britain; but in both countries they carry out a great variety of useful work, providing medical mission dispensaries, district nurses, workrooms for needle-women, hospitals for women and children, &c.

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  • There are 12 hospitals (3 of them city institutions), 6 orphan asylums, 4 homes for the aged, a foundlings' home and a state industrial school for girls.

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  • Nurses were provided by the male and female monastic orders, an arrangement which still continues in most Roman Catholic countries, though it is gradually being abandoned through the increasing demands of medical science, which have led the hospitals to establish training schools of their own.

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  • They received their practical training at Guy's and St Thomas's Hospitals.

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  • The despatch of Florence Nightingale with a staff of trained nurses, to superintend the administration of the military hospitals was the direct result of the publicity given to the details of the Crimean War by The Times, and it formed a new departure which riveted the eyes of the civilized world.

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  • In France, where the nursing was comparatively well performed by the religious orders, no change was made until 1877, when a training school was opened in Paris by the municipality, and two others by the Assistance Publique, in connexion with the Salpetriere and Bicetre Hospitals.

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  • In Great Britain nearly all the general and special hospitals and many of the poor-law infirmaries offer systematic professional training to nurses.

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  • They live in a home attached to the institution, under a matron, and in the most modern establishments each nurse has a separate bedroom, with common dining and recreation rooms. Private nursing staffs are attached to several of the hospitals; they are recruited from the staff nurses and probationers on completion of their course, and supply nurses to private patients.

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  • With regard to the earnings of nurses in general, the salaries paid in hospitals have already been mentioned; for private work the scales in force at different institutions vary considerably, according to the other advantages and benefits provided.

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  • Regular training on the same plan as in general hospitals is provided in London at the fever hospitals of the Metropolitan Asylums Board (12 in number, with from 360 to 760 beds each), and at a considerable number of provincial institutions.

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  • Massage is taught regularly at the hospital just named, and at a few other special hospitals.

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  • A large number of children's hospitals throughout the country give regular training in the nursing of children; they take probationers at a somewhat earlier age than the general schools; the course is usually shorter (one or two years), and the salaries slightly lower.

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  • The Red Cross Society provides a certain amount of trained nursing, and next to it the bestorganized work is done by religious orders; but the nursing in the hospitals appears to be still in a neglected state.

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  • The Brothers of Mercy have charge of some of the men's hospitals, and also carry on a remarkable system of district nursing.

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  • It hardly finds a place in the British civil system, and was condemned for hospitals in Germany, where it is at its best, by so eminent an authority as Professor Virchow.

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  • Flesh food is not included in the dietary of the chief hospitals and orphanages of the native states of India, excepting in the wards devoted to Europeans.

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  • Geneva is well supplied with charitable institutions, hospitals, &c. Among other remarkable sights of the city may be mentioned the great hydraulic establishment (built 1882-1899) of the Forces Motrices du Rhone (turbines), the singular monument set up to the memory of the late duke of Brunswick who left his fortune to the city in 1873, and the tie Jean-Jacques Rousseau now connected with the Pont des Bergues.

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  • The various hospitals, the poor-house, the orphanage and most of the other charitable foundations are Roman Catholic institutions.

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  • Among the institutions are the City infirmary (at Hartwell, a suburb), which, besides supporting pauper inmates, affords relief to outdoor poor; the Cincinnati hospital, which is supported by taxation and treats without charge all who are unable to pay; twenty other hospitals, some of which are charitable institutions; a United States marine hospital; the Longview hospital for the insane, at Carthage, Io m.

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  • The city has three well-equipped hospitals, the beautiful Pentucket club house, a children's home, an old ladies' home and numerous charitable organizations.

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  • The principal hospitals are the Samaritan, the St Joseph's Mercy, and the German Lutheran.

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  • Noteworthy also are the collection of the Society of Dutch Literature (1766); the collections of casts and of engravings; the seamen's training school; the Remonstrant seminary, transferred hither from Amsterdam in 1873; the two hospitals (one of which is private); the house of correction; and the court-house.

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  • The best of them, priorato, is chiefly known in England, under the disguise of second or third-rate port; it was much used in the military hospitals of America during the Civil War.

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  • Seeing then that the Catholic sovereigns had been forced to expel them, that many bishops and other eminent persons demanded their extinction, and that the Society had ceased to fulfil the intention of its institute, the pope declares it necessary for the peace of the Church that it should be suppressed, extinguished, abolished and abrogated for ever, with all its houses, colleges, schools and hospitals; transfers all the authority of its general or officers to the local ordinaries; forbids the reception of any more novices, directing that such as were actually in probation should be dismissed, and declaring that profession in the Society should not serve as a title to holy orders.

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  • Great attention has been paid to higher education, and - at least in the hospitals - to modern sanitation and hygiene.

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  • Among hospitals those of special general interest are the Steevens, the oldest in the city, founded under the will of Dr Richard Steevens in 1720; the Mater Misericordiae (1861),which includes a laboratory and museum, and is managed by the Sisters of Mercy, but relieves sufferers independently of their creed; the Rotunda lying-in hospital (1756); the Royal hospital for incurables, Donnybrook, which was founded in 1744 by the Dublin Musical Society; and the Royal Victoria Eye and Ear hospital, Adelaide Road, which amalgamated (1904) two similar institutions.

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  • The hospitals and foundling refuge, the institute and the town hall are handsome modern buildings.

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  • They were employed by the police in dealing with prostitutes, and on their authority lunatics were shut up in hospitals and sometimes in prisons.

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  • Among the public buildings and institutions are the Marine Museum, the Public Library (founded in 1854 by Josiah Little and containing about 45,000 volumes), the old Tracy mansion (built in 1771 or 1772), which forms part of the Public Library building, the Anna Jacques and Homoeopathic hospitals, homes for aged women and men, a Home for Destitute Children, Old South Church, in which is the tomb of George Whitefield, and the Young Men's Christian Association building, which is a memorial to George Henry Corliss (1817-1888), the inventor, erected by his widow, a native of Newburyport.

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  • There is a combination poorhouse at Kirkwall, where there are also two hospitals.

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  • Numerous schools and hospitals are supported.

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  • This extraordinary man, associated by tradition with Omar Khayyam, the well-known mathematician and free-thinking poet, and with Hassan (ibn) Sabbah, afterwards the founder of the sect of the Assassins (q.v.), was a renowned author and statesman of the first rank, and immortalized his name by the foundation of several universities (the Nizamiyah at Bagdad), observatories, mosques, hospitals and other institutions of public utility.

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  • The Roman Catholics, the London Missionary Society and the Wesleyans have all missions in the town; and there are two missionary hospitals.

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  • There is a handsome cathedral; and the Tomas Terry theatre (given to the city by the heirs of one of the millionaire sugar planters of the jurisdiction), the governor's house (1841-1844), the military and government hospitals, market place and railway station are worthy of note.

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  • Among the hospitals is that called by the name of its founder, Cottolengo, a vast institution providing for more than 5000 persons; there are also the Ospedale Maggiore di San Giovanni, the Ospedale Mauriziano, and many other hospitals for special diseases, as well as asylums and charitable institutions of all kinds.

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  • Although much money is given to hospitals and asylums, Rio de Janeiro has no great educational institutions either public or private.

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  • Hospitals, &c. - Rio de Janeiro is well provided with hospitals, asylums and benevolent institutions.

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  • There are also a number of private hospitals maintained by church brotherhoods and charitable associations; among them are the Portuguese hospital in Rua de Santo Amaro and the Strangers' Hospital (American and British) in Botafogo.

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  • One of the hospitals - that of Caridade - is the largest in the state.

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  • The hospitals and the charitable and correctional institutions are numerous and are well administered.

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  • Among the hospitals are a state hospital for the insane, the Erie county, the Buffalo general, the Children's, the United States marine (maintained by the Federal government), the German, the Homeopathic, the Women's, the German Deaconess and the Riverside hospitals, and the Buffalo hospital of the Sisters of Charity.

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  • Dresden has several important hospitals, asylums and other charitable institutions.

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  • The modern town contains the palace of the chief, a college, a high school, a girls' school, a service school to train officials, a law school, hospitals for men and for women, a museum, paper-mills, and a printing-press issuing a state gazette.

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  • The town has handsome modern public buildings, including the town hall, schools for primary and higher education, hospitals and theatres.

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  • A distinction is made between hospitals and asylums. The asylum for the chronic insane is at South Mountain, 1894 (act of 1891).

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  • Stevens industrial school (1905) at Lancaster, hospitals for the treatment of persons injured in the mines, at Ashland (1879), Hazleton (1887) and Shamokin (1907), and cottage hospitals at Blossburg, Connellsville, Mercer and Philipsburg (all 1887).

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  • There are numerous hospitals and charities.

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  • The monastic institute had a great development in Russia, and at the present day there are in the Russian empire some 400 monasteries of men and Ioo of women, many of which support hospitals, almshouses and schools.

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  • With the advance of the Saracens the knights of St Lazarus, when driven from the Holy Land and Egypt, migrated to France (1291) and Naples (1311), where they founded leper hospitals.

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  • It has several beautiful parks, two hospitals, a number of fine churches and school buildings, and a public library.

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  • There are 980 doctors (most of them fully qualified) labouring in British and American missions; and in 1 9 10 it was calculated that the in-patients in mission hospitals exceeded 160,000, while the visits of out-patients in a year were about 5,000,000.

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  • In several of the great London hospitals there are missionary associations, the members of which are medical students; but a chief source of supply in the past has been the Edinburgh Medical Mission, founded in 1841, which, while working among the poor in that city, has trained many young doctors for missionary service.In Rajputana at Jaipur Dr. Valantine started mission in 1866 which was led by the mission of Ajmer started in 1860 by Dr. Shoolbred and was extended in various districts of rajputana by Dr. Sommerville,Rev.John Traill and lately by Rt.

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  • The town of Palembang is a large place on the river Musi, with 50,000 inhabitants (2500 Chinese), extensive barracks, hospitals, &c., a mosque (1740), considered the finest in the Dutch Indies, and a traditional tomb of Alexander the Great.

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  • Among the hospitals of Copenhagen, besides many modern institutions, there may be mentioned Frederick's hospital, erected in 1752-1757 by Frederick V., the Communal Hospital, erected in 1859-1863, on the eastern side of the Sortedamsso, the general hospital in Ameliegade, founded in 1769, and the garrison hospital, in Rigensgade, established in 1816 by Frederick VI.

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  • There are several seaside sanitoriums and hospitals, including the Atlantic City hospital, the Mercer Memorial home, and the Children's Seashore home.

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  • The city's charitable institutions consist of two general hospitals, each of which has a training school for nurses; a municipal hospital, an orphan asylum, a home for the friendless, two old folks' homes, and a bureau of charities; here, also, on a bluff, within a large enclosure and overlooking both lake and city, is the state soldiers' and sailors' home, and near by is a monument erected to the memory of General Anthony Wayne, who died here on the 15th of December 1796.

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  • St Vincent of Paul soon followed; in 1633 he established the Sisters of Charity, bound only by yearly vows, and wholly given up to works of charity - chiefly nursing in hospitals and in the homes of the poor, and primary education in poor schools.

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  • Other hospitals are the Royal, for children and women, Waterloo Road, the Lying-in Hospital, York Road, and the South-western fever hospital in Stockwell.

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  • The hospitals and the asylum for the poor are among the finest institutions of their kind in Italy.

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  • Here also are the state normal and model schools (1855), the state library, housed in the capitol, the state school for deaf mutes, the state home for girls, one of the two state hospitals for the insane (opened in 1848), the state arsenal - the building being the old state prison - the state prison (1836), St Francis hospital (1874), Mercer hospital (1892), the William McKinley memorial hospital (1887), the city hospital, two children's day nurseries, the Friends' home, the Union industrial home (for destitute children), the Florence Crittenton home (1895), the indigent widows' and single women's home (1854), the Har Sinai charity society, the home for friendless children, and the society of St Vincent de Paul.

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  • Here also are to be found the churches, schools, theatres, asylums, and hospitals, academies of law and medicine, governor's palace, public library, and museum, and an interesting public garden on the edge of the bluff, overlooking the bay.

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  • Rostock is the seat of the supreme court for both the duchies of Mecklenburg, and is well equipped with schools, hospitals, and other institutions.

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  • The De aedificiis contains an account of the chief public works executed during the reign of Justinian down to 558 (in which year it seems to have been composed), particularly churches, palaces, hospitals, fortresses, roads, bridges and other river works throughout the empire.

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  • The charitable institutions and professional schools included in 1908 about thirty hospitals, several children's homes and homes for the aged, an industrial home, the Kansas City school of law, the University medical college, and the Scarritt training school.

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  • A non-partisan board composed of citizens who must not be physicians has general control of the city's hospitals and health department.

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  • The principal buildings are the parish church, well-placed on a hill overlooking the pier, convalescent homes, Cottage and Victoria fever hospitals, and the town house.

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  • Among penal and charitable institutions are the Riverside State Penitentiary, three hospitals, three homes for orphans, a home for the friendless and an industrial school.

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  • The public buildings include the burgh hall, municipal buildings, Hermitage schools and two hospitals.

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  • There are two theatres, an agricultural college, an art school, several gymnasia, a commercial and other schools, an observatory, and two fine hospitals.

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  • New and palatial buildings of the various ministries, several high and middle schools, a few big hospitals, and the residences of several Hungarian magnates, are among the principal edifices in this part of the town.

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  • Catarrhal complaints are common, however, and leprosy is widely prevalent, it being necessary to maintain three large hospitals for lepers.

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  • Among the public buildings are the governor's and bishop's palaces, townhall, cathedral and 9 churches, national college, episcopal seminary and schools of law and medicine, theatre, two hospitals, custom-house, and several asylums and charitable institutions.

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  • Of these, seven were hospitals for the insane - six for specific parts of the state, viz.

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  • Complete state control of the insane and the introduction of modern hospital and curative treatment in the state asylums (or hospitals) are gradually taking the place of county care for the insane and of antiquated custodial treatment in and political control of the state asylums - changes largely due to the action of Governor Deneen, who appointed in 1906 a Board of Charities pledged to reform.

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  • The ample revenues which his predecessors had consumed in pomp and luxury he diligently applied to the establishment of hospitals; and the multitudes who were supported by his charity preferred the eloquent discourses of their benefactor to the amusements of the theatre or of the circus.

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  • Other institutions are the technical college, Leonard Street, and St Mark's, St Luke's and the Royal chest hospitals.

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  • Minden contains a gymnasium and several hospitals, besides other charitable institutions.

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  • The duke of Hesse also took part in the principal battles of the Franco-Prussian war, while the duchess was actively engaged in organizing hospitals for the relief of the sick and wounded.

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  • He did his best to remedy the misery caused by the intestine wars, repaired the ruined mosques and other public edifices, founded hospitals and libraries - his library in Shiraz was one of the wonders of the world - and improved irrigation.

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  • It has a castle (the residence of the old counts of Brieg), a lunatic asylum, a gymnasium with a good library, several churches and hospitals, and a theatre.

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  • Among reforms not specifically referred to may be mentioned the improvement of coastwise navigation, the provision of posts, roads, railways, public buildings, hospitals and sanitary works, and the official advancement of industries.

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  • Hospitals, orphanages, schools and an admirable college in Seoul have been founded, along with tri-lingual (Chinese, Korean and English) printing-presses; religious, historical and scientific works and much of the Bible have been translated into En-mun, and periodicals of an enlightened nature in the Korean script are also circulated.

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  • There are five other churches, a handsome town hall, an orphanasylum, several hospitals, a mechanics' institute, a famous grammar school (gymnasium), a normal and several other schools, and two public libraries.

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  • Henceforth, for more than ten years he remained in and about Washington, acting as a volunteer nurse in the army hospitals as long as the war lasted, and longer, and then finding employment as a clerk in the government departments, in the meantime adding to and revising his Leaves and publishing two or three editions of them, himself his own publisher and bookseller.

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  • There are state hospitals for the insane at Agnew, Santa Clara county; at Stockton, San Joaquin county; at Napa, Napa county; at Patton, San Bernardino county; and, with a colony of tubercular patients, at Ukiah, Mendocino county.

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  • Albacete comprises the picturesque old upper town and the new or lower town, with lawcourts, schools, barracks, hospitals, a council-hall, a bull-ring and other modern buildings, mostly erected after the city became a provincial capital in 1833.

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  • Bern possesses a university (founded in 1834) and two admirably organized hospitals.

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  • In the Bombay hospitals it was about 70% among the former, and between 30 and 40% among the latter, which was much the same as in Oporto, Sydney and Cape Town.

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  • This view is borne out by the experience in hospitals and with " contacts," which goes to show that with reasonable care and under fair conditions the risk of infection from ordinary plague patients is very small.

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  • Burlington has three well-equipped hospitals.

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  • For each state hospital for the insane there is a special board of directors consisting of three members appointed by the governor with the concurrence of the Senate, one every two years, and over them all is the commissioner of state hospitals for the insane, who is appointed by the governor with the concurrence of the Senate for a term of four years.

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  • The members of the special boards under the chairmanship of the commissioner constitute a general board for all the hospitals, and the superintendent of each hospital is appointed by the general board.

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  • The public buildings include two hospitals, a townhall, music hall, library and reading room and science institute.

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  • For many years the legislature has also contributed to the support of a number of private hospitals and charitable institutions.

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  • At first Christ's hospital shared a common fund with the two other hospitals of thefoundation(Bridewell and St Thomas's), but the three soon became independent.

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  • Among the benevolent and charitable institutions are the royal national hospitals for consumptives (founded in 1869), the seaside home of the London city mission, the St Catherine's home for consumptives and the convalescent home of the Royal Hants Hospital.

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  • The principal modern buildings are the military and naval hospitals, the theatre, museum, library and schools.

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  • On the island of Kungsholm, south of Vasastad, are the Caroline medical institute, several hospitals, the principal of which is the Serafimer (1752), the royal mint and factories.

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  • The army troops, divisions and mounted brigades consist of 56 regiments of yeomanry; 14 batteries and 14 ammunition columns R.H.A., 151 batteries and 55 ammunition columns R.F.A., 3 mountain batteries and ammunition column, and 14 heavy batteries and ammunition columns R.G.A.; 28 field companies, 29 telegraph companies, railway battalion, &c., R.E.; 204 battalions infantry (including to of cyclists, the Honourable Artillery Company, and certain corps of the Officers' Training Corps training as territorials); 60 units A.S.C.; 56 field ambulances, 23 general hospitals and 2 sanitary companies R.A.M.C. Told off to the defended seaports are 16 groups of garrison artillery companies and 58 fortress and electric light companies R.E.

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  • She had a natural shrinking from society; and though her social position necessitated her presentation at Court, her first season in town was spent in examining into the working of hospitals, reformatories and other charitable institutions.

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  • This was followed by a tour of inspection of foreign hospitals.

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  • From Kaiserswerth she went to Paris, where she studied the system of nursing and management in the hospitals under the charge of the sisters of St Vincent de Paul.

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  • She set out on the 24th October with a staff of thirty-seven nurses, partly volunteers, partly professionals trained in hospitals.

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  • Soon she had 10,000 men under her charge, and the general superintendence of all the hospitals on the Bosporus.

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  • With the 50,000 raised in recognition of her services she founded the Nightingale Home for training nurses at St Thomas's and King's College Hospitals.

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  • She also turned her attention to the question of army sanitary reform and army hospitals, and to the work of the Army Medical College at Chatham.

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  • According to the returns of 1903 there were 88 hospitals in the republic, which reported 79,051 admissions during the year, and had 6215 patients under treatment at its close; 628,536 patients received gratuitous medical assistance at the public dispensaries during the year; there were 24 foundling hospitals with 557 0 children; and there were 3092 persons in the various hospicios or asylums, and 1478 in the imbecile asylums.

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  • The former mission has 24 churches, ii 8 schools, 2 hospitals and 4 dispensaries; the latter has 4 churches, I, schools, 2 hospitals and 4 dispensaries.

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  • There are also hospitals and dispensaries for men and women at Julfa, Isfahan, Yezd and Kerman.

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  • The hospitals at Julfa and Isfahan have accommodation for 100 patients each, and are sometimes full to overflowing; the dispensaries are generally overcrowded.

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  • There are also two state-subsidized hospitals, a college, a school of mines, a technological museum, several large and handsome churches, and numerous subsidized charitable institutions.

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  • Other institutions were added to these, including a lunatic asylum, a Magdalen refuge, and hospitals for men and women.

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  • In the absence of any of His Majesty's ships he is senior naval officer; he looks after men left behind as stragglers, or in hospital or prison, and sends them on in due course to the nearest ship. He is also empowered by statute to advance for the erection or maintenance of Anglican churches, hospitals, and places of interment sums equal to the amount subscribed for the purpose by the resident British subjects.

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  • The practical effect of the bactericidal action of solar light is the destruction of enormous quantities of germs in rivers, the atmosphere and other exposed situations, and experiments have shown that it is especially the pathogenic bacteria - anthrax, typhoid, &c. - which thus succumb to lightaction; the discovery that the electric arc is very rich in bactericidal rays led to the hope that it could be used for disinfecting purposes in hospitals, but mechanical difficulties intervene.

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  • Since the introduction of stone and brick, the whole city has been rebuilt and now contains numerous structures of some architectural pretension, the royal palaces, the houses formerly belonging to the prime minister and nobles, the French residency, the Anglican and Roman Catholic cathedrals, several stone churches, as well as others of brick, colleges, schools, hospitals, courts of justice and other government buildings, and hundreds of good dwellinghouses.

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  • The public buildings include the Burgh Hall, the academy (with a graceful steeple), the county buildings, the Denny Memorial, a Literary and a Mechanics' institute, Masonic hall, two cottage hospitals, a fever hospital, a public library and the combination poorhouse.

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  • Their jurisdiction extends to watersupply, the drainage, lighting and cleaning of the streets, the care of the poor, hospitals and schools.

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  • The municipal hospitals are six in number, the largest of which is the Virchow hospital, situate in Moabit and opened in 1906.

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  • It is arranged on the pavilion system, contains 2000 beds, and is one of the most splendidly equipped hospitals in the world.

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  • The hospitals of the nursing sisters (Diakonissen Anstalten) number 8, while there are 60 registered private hospitals under the superintendence of responsible doctors and under the inspection of government.

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  • Among the institutions of Wandsworth are the Royal Hospital for Incurables, Putney; the Fountain and the Grove fever hospitals, Lower Tooting; the Clapham School of Art, Wandsworth Technical Institute; the Roman Catholic Training College for Women, West Hill; and Wandsworth Prison, Heathfield Road.

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  • There are a gymnasium, two hospitals dating from the 14th century and an old town-hall.

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  • Other institutions are the Whitelands training college for school-mistresses, in which Ruskin took deep interest; the St Mark's college for school-masters; the Victoria and the Cheyne hospitals for children, a cancer hospital, the Southwestern polytechnic, and a public library containing an excellent collection relative to local history.

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  • The state supports the following charitable and correctional institutions all under the inspection of a State Department of Charities and Correction (1905); hospitals for the insane at Trenton and Morris Plains; a training-school for feeble-minded children (partly supported by the state) and a home for feeble-minded women at Vineland; a sanatorium for tuberculous diseases at Glen Gardner; a village for epileptics, with a farm of 700 acres, near Skillman, Somerset county; a state home (reform school) for boys near Jamesburg, Middlesex county, and for girls in Ewing township, near Trenton; a state reformatory for criminals sixteen to thirty years of age, near Rahway; a state prison at Trenton; a home for disabled soldiers at Kearney,' Hudson county; a home for disabled soldiers, sailors and their wives at Vineland"; and a school for the deaf at Trenton.

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  • Under the Isolation Hospitals Acts 1893 and 1901, a county council may provide for the establishment of isolation hospitals for the reception of patients suffering from infectious diseases on Hospi t a l s the application of any local authority within the county, or on the report of the medical officer of the county that hospital accommodation is necessary and has not been provided, or it may take over hospitals already provided by a local authority.

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  • The district council are empowered to provide hospitals or temporary places for the reception of the sick.

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  • As has already been mentioned when dealing with county councils, if a district council make default in providing hospital accommodation, the county council may put in operation the Isolation Hospitals Act.

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  • The power given to provide hospitals must be exercised so as not to create a nuisance, and much litigation has taken place in respect of the providing of hospitals for smallpox.

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  • Among its public buildings and institutions are the county court-house (in which are the rooms of the Washington County Historical Society), the Federal building, two hospitals, a Y.M.C.A.

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  • Besides the strictly state institutions, there are a number of private charitable institutions which are assisted by state funds; among these are the eye and ear infirmary at Portland, the Maine state sanatorium at Hebron for the treatment of tuberculosis, and various hospitals, orphanages, &c. The national government has a branch of the national home for disabled volunteer soldiers at Togus, and a marine hospital at Portland.

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  • Among others may be mentioned hospitals for the sick, the aged, the infirm, the blind, the deaf, the dumb, the insane, and homes for widows, orphans, foundlings and sailors.

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  • In 1864, however, the monastic estate was assigned to the Board of Civil Hospitals, by which a hospital and baths were opened and the mineral springs developed.

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  • The principal hospitals are the Incurabili, Gesu e Maria, Santa Maria della Pace and a hospital for poor priests, which are all under the same management.

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  • Services are arranged in connexion with workhouses, hospitals and other public institutions.

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  • The magnificent revenues derived from the profits of this manufacture were devoted by the monks to various purposes of benevolence, especially in the neighbouring villages, which owe to this source their churches, schools, hospitals, &c., &c., built and maintained at the expense of the monks.

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  • In addition to the government offices, its buildings include a handsome university, a wooden cathedral, a national theatre, an academy of science and literature, a chamber of commerce, and astronomical observatory and a number of hospitals and charitable institutions.

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  • The boiars were to be responsible for the maintenance of schools, hospitals and roads; they and the prince together for the militia.

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  • Charitable and Penal Institutions.-The charitable and penal institutions of the state include the penitentiary at Jefferson City, opened in 1836, which is self-supporting; a training school for boys at Boonville (opened 1889), an industrial home for girls at Chillicothe (established 1887), hospitals for the insane at Fulton (1847), St Joseph (opened 1874), Nevada (1887), and Farmington (1899); a school for the blind at St Louis (opened 1851); a school for the deaf at Fulton (opened 1851); a colony for the feeble-minded and epileptic at Marshall (established 1899); a state sanitorium, for consumptives, at Mount Vernon (established 1905, opened 1907); a Federal soldiers' home at St James, and a Confederate soldiers' home at Higginsville (both established 1897).

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  • In 1789 his Observations sur les hopitaux procured him an appointment as administrator of hospitals in Paris, and in 1795 he became professor of hygiene at the medical school of Paris, a post which he exchanged for the chair of legal medicine and the history of medicine in 1799.

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  • Its older parts, Moorish in many features and with narrow irregular streets, contrast with the modern parts, which have broad streets and squares, and many fine public buildings - theatre, town hall, hospitals, courts of justice and a bridge over the Sangonera.

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  • They included a new palace and a durbar hall, a bridge across the river and embankment, a pavilion and garden laid out around the site of Baber's tomb overlooking the Chardeh valley; and many other buildings of public utility connected with stud arrangements, the manufacture of small arms and ammunition, and the requirements of what may be termed a wholesale shop under European direction, besides hospitals, dispensaries, bazaars, &c. The new palace is within an entrenchment just outside the city.

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  • The city has numerous hospitals and charities, and there is a state penitentiary here.

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  • The principal other buildings are the provincial government offices, the royal school of music, the college of art, the large building (1874) of the society for arts and sciences, the ethnographical institute of the Netherlands Indies with fine library, the theatres, civil and military hospitals, orphanage, lunatic asylum and other charitable institutions; the fine modern railway station (1892), the cavalry and artillery and the infantry barracks, and the cannon foundry.

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  • There are a number of hospitals and similar benevolthnt institutions, including the leper house founded in the reign of King John, now used practically as an infirmary.

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  • The chief hospitals are called after the countess of Dufferin, Sayaji Rao and Jamnabai, the widow of Khande Rao.

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  • There are also a celebrated observatory, long under the direction of Wilhelm Klinkerfues (1827-1884), a botanical garden, an agricultural institute and various hospitals, all connected with the university.

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  • The city has two fine parks, a Carnegie library, a Federal building, the Immanuel and St Joseph hospitals, two commercial colleges, and a state normal school (1868).

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  • Other structures are the County buildings, the Public, St Margaret's, Music and Carnegie halls, the last in the Tudor style, Carnegie public baths, high school (founded in 1560), school of science and art, and two hospitals.

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  • Castres has a sub-prefecture, tribunals of first instance and of commerce, a hoard of trade-arbitrators, a chamber of commerce, a branch of the bank of France and two hospitals.

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  • Their services to society and the Church include 6 houses for fallen women, 7 orphanages, 9 elementary and high schools and colleges, 5 hospitals, mission work in 13 parishes and visiting in several " married quarters " of barracks.

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  • All matters concerning the streets, the markets, the bazaars, the street-porters (hamals), public weighers, baths and hospitals come under his jurisdiction.

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  • Foreigners have a right to establish their own schools and hospitals, to hold their special religious services, and even to maintain their respective national post-offices.

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  • With the growth of hospitals and other charitable institutions, however, the functions of deacons became considerably curtailed.

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  • In houses or hospitals where cases of the disease are under treatment, disinfectants should be freely employed, and the evacuations of the patients removed as speedily as possible, having previously been sterilized in much the same manner as is employed in typhoid fever.

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  • There are state hospitals and many other charitable institutions.

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  • On the south of the old town are the various schools, laboratories and hospitals of the medical faculty, all built since 1877.

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  • Gilbert Scott's skill, and the municipal offices, club-house and hospitals are all admirable in their way.

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  • There are several high-grade (classical and modern) schools, technical, mining and commercial schools, a theatre, a permanent art exhibition, and hospitals.

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  • Chief among its industrial establishments are the famous iron and steel works of Krupp, and the whole of Essen may be said to depend for its livelihood upon this firm, which annually expends vast sums in building and supporting churches, schools, clubs, hospitals and philanthropic institutions, and in other ways providing for the welfare of its employees.

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  • The commissioner must inspect once each year all penal, correctional and eleemosynary institutions, including public hospitals, jails, poorhouses and corporations and organizations doing charitable work; and the commissioner appears as next friend in cases affecting the property of orphan minors, and has power to investigate complaints against public and private institutions whose charters may be revoked for cause by the commissioner.

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  • Among the hospitals are the Mercy Hospital (1896, under the Sisters of Divine Providence), the Wesson Memorial (formerly Hampden Homeopathic) Hospital (1900), the Wesson Maternity Hospital (1906), and the Springfield Hospital (1883).

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  • The public buildings include several modern churches, two hospitals and a museum with collections of antiquities, natural history, porcelain, &c. Connected with the museum is a public library with 75,000 volumes and a number of valuable manuscripts, many of them richly illuminated.

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  • For many years (1862-1896), all medical aid to the sick, the formation of hospitals and dispensaries, the training of native doctors, midwives and nurses, and the production of medical literature was entirely due to the Protestant missionaries, viz.

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  • South-west of these buildings, on the other side of the Johannisthal Park, are clustered the medical institutes and hospitals of the university - the infirmary, clinical and other hospitals, the physico-chemical institute, pathological institute, physiological institute, ophthalmic hospital, pharmacological institute, the schools of anatomy, the chemical laboratory, the zoological institute, the physicomineralogical institute, the botanical garden and also the veterinary schools, deaf and dumb asylum, agricultural college and astronomical observatory.

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  • There are two children's hospitals, the climate proving peculiarly beneficial in the treatment of scrofulous affections.

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  • Among the hospitals and charitable institutions are the Minneapolis city hospital, the state hospital for crippled and deformed children, and Asbury Methodist, the Northwestern, the Deaconess', the Swedish, the St Mary's, the Maternity and the St Barnabas hospitals, Bethany Home, the Catholic orphan asylum, the Washburn orphans' home, the Pillsbury House (1906) where settlement work is carried on by the Plymouth Congregational Church, and several free dispensaries.

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  • Among the principal buildings are the city hall, the Federal building, the county court house, the public library, the high school and the St Vincent's and the Baroness Erlanger hospitals.

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  • Missionary efforts of all sorts; hospitals and nursing; industrial homes and refuges; relief funds, &c., found in her a generous supporter.

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  • Among the charitable institutions are the general hospitals (Harper, Grace and St Mary's); the Detroit Emergency, the Children's Free and the United States Marine hospitals; St Luke's hospital, church home, and orphanage; the House of Providence (a maternity hospital and infant asylum); the Woman's hospital and foundling's home; the Home for convalescent children, &c. In 1894 the mayor, Hazen Senter Pingree (1842-1901), instituted the practice of preparing, through municipal aid and supervision, large tracts of vacant land in and about the city for the growing of potatoes and other vegetables and then, in conjunction with the board of poor commissioners, assigning it in small lots to families of the unemployed, and furnishing them with seed for planting.

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  • In 15 4 8 he founded the celebrated confraternity of the Santissima Trinita de' Pellegrini e de' Convalescente, whose primary object is to minister to the needs of the thousands of poor pilgrims who flock to Rome, especially in years of jubilee, and also to relieve the patients discharged from hospitals, but still too weak for labour.

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  • Apart from churches, mosques and synagogues, there are a few noteworthy modern buildings, such as the Ottoman Bank, the baths, quarantine station, schools and hospitals; but the chief architectural interest of Salonica is centred in its Roman and Byzantine remains.

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  • A technical school, school of art and free library, and several hospitals are maintained.

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  • A state board of charities has supervision over all philanthropic and penal institutions in the state, including hospitals, which numbered 103 in 1907; and the board visits the almshouses supported by seventy-eight (of the 168) towns of the state, and investigates and supervises the provision made for the town poor in the other ninety towns of the state; some, as late as 1906, were, with the few paupers maintained by the state, cared for in a private almshouse at Tariffville, which was commonly known as the " state almshouse.

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  • The St Spiridion Foundation (due to the liberality of Prince Gregory Ghika in 1727, and available for the sick of all countries and creeds) has an annual income of over £80,000, and maintains hospitals and churches in several towns of Moldavia, besides the baths at Slanic in Walachia.

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  • Besides government offices the public buildings include hospitals, and a branch of the Gordon College of Khartum.

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  • Each man contributes to a medical fund which maintains the fever, accident and general hospitals, providing also laundries and baths.

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  • The principal duties of this board are to examine the condition and the management of such institutions and report to the governor; and county and city authorities must submit to it for criticism all plans for new jails, public infirmaries, and hospitals.

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  • He was indefatigable, in war as in peace, in parading and inspecting; the weary and starving soldiers were forced to turn out amid the marshes of the Dobrudscha as spick and span as on the parade grounds of St Petersburg; but he could do nothing to set order in the confusion of the commissariat, which caused the troops to die like flies of dysentery and scurvy; or to remedy the scandals of the hospitals, which inflicted on the wounded unspeakable sufferings.

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  • It does seem curious that the oil ministry was so successfully protected and the hospitals so unsuccessfully protected from the shortages.

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  • Given that mental for children age britain single-payer advocates that hospitals end.

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  • Four percent of all patients dying in tertiary care hospitals in Europe have invasive aspergillosis.

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  • Other small community hospitals were funded by local benefactors donating the full cost of the building to the town in trust.

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  • It delivers almost 40% of total healthcare services, and like western biomedicine, is predominantly based in hospitals.

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  • Textile mills, churches, schools, hospitals, farm buildings, railroad stations or Ministry of Defense sites are just a few examples.

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  • Some of the injured were loaded onto other double-decker busses, to be taken to hospitals that rapidly became jammed.

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  • It also donates the relevant medical equipment to doctors ' surgeries and hospitals, plus funding the sports cardiology at the Olympic medical center.

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  • We hope that further developments will include a committee chairperson rotating among the 9 hospitals.

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  • He now holds breastfeeding clinics in several hospitals in the Toronto area.

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  • To tackle the menace, ministers promised a crackdown on poor hygiene with hospitals ranked in a league table of cleanliness.

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  • Dr. Wilcox recently chaired a working party looking at diarrhoeal infections caused by the bacterium Clostridium difficile, spread primarily in hospitals.

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  • There was major disinvestment in schools, hospitals and transport, record unemployment, severe homelessness, insufficient housing.

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  • The competition was designed to generate poster concepts from the NHS frontline to promote staff hand hygiene in hospitals.

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  • And he promised to go further than Labor in giving foundation hospitals freedom from central control.

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  • Such uses might include gasworks, heavy industry, hospitals and landfill sites.

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  • Kevin Curran, the newly elected General Secretary of the GMB, used his victory speech to attack the setting up of foundation hospitals.

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  • In 1999 private acute hospitals had a total turnover of £ 3bn compared to a total NHS expenditure of £ 52 bn.

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  • Due to my desperation I enquired about other private hospitals within an hour's drive of where I live.

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  • Kevin Curran, the newly elected general secretary of the GMB, used his victory speech to attack the setting up of foundation hospitals.

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  • By law, leper hospitals had to be situated outside town boundaries and St. Leonard's was on the Newton side of the beck.

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  • Military facilities and Bureau of Veteran Affairs hospitals provide hospitalization, possibly over-flowing into civilian hospitals.

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  • The conference focussed on the new ' Revolving Door ' system between prison, homelessness hostels and hospitals.

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  • These include giving lifts to hospitals or doctors ' surgeries, or even just for a social visit for someone who is normally housebound.

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  • Areas covered include clean hospitals, hospital food, basic care services, privacy and dignity, ward housekeeping and the healing environment.

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  • The majority of the deaths occurred in the overcrowded and often insanitary conditions of the field and base hospitals.

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  • Otherwise, we should never have had sufficient nurses to man the hospitals - if I may use an Irishism.

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  • They were submitted through the pathology laboratory by 1 of the 16 general hospitals in the region.

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  • A fibreoptic intubating laryngoscope should be readily available for use in all surgical hospitals.

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  • They buy their second homes near decent hospitals and come to Spain to avoid lengthy waiting lists at home.

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  • Oxford Radcliffe Hospitals NHS Trust is to get two new linear accelerators to cut delays and improve treatment for cancer patients in Oxfordshire.

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  • In the medical field for example, different hospitals hold millions of digital mammograms, which could be put into a digital format.

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  • We also provide specialist medical advice and clinical support to hospitals, as well as educating and training transfusion medicine specialists.

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  • Radiosurgery Radiosurgery is a relatively new technique for treating acoustic neuromas and is available in only a few hospitals in the UK.

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  • He then took over for registering and inspecting private and voluntary nursing homes and private hospitals at a health authority.

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  • In most major hospitals the volume of dermatology outpatients will exceed that for the whole of Internal Medicine.

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  • Tuition fees, foundation hospitals, faith schools - even the ridiculously overblown debate on fox-hunting - have all provoked a visceral reaction.

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  • Her specialist interests include medieval hospitals and religious and social attitudes to charity and the poor, and lay women's piety.

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  • Thanks to your help, Les petits pois will be able to send a clown for children in hospitals.

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  • All the resorts we feature have well equipped and staffed polyclinics and hospitals.

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  • Was open to set aside pretax with hospitals that sight quot said.

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  • I wondered, as a liaison psychiatrist, whether there might be a therapeutic place for this technique in hospitals.

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  • You can add pushpins over the hospitals so that they can still be seen when the map is zoomed out again.

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  • From 1931 it was linked with the Holt radium Institute which gave radium treatments for patients in local hospitals.

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  • Different hospitals may recommend different ways to treat retinoblastoma.

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  • The teaching of the Church encouraged the building of shelters, alms-houses and hospitals with the promise to the donor of a heavenly reward.

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  • Pediatric rheumatology is based in both hospitals, with children from babies up to 14 treated at GOSH.

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  • From the other private medical insurance and hospitals as y rho esubt much more difficulty.

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  • Older children helped in local hospitals, filled fire buckets and helped knit scarves and blankets to send to the troops.

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  • Students may be based in hospitals or at home in addition to medical schools.

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  • Community nurses work closely with GPs, local social services and hospitals.

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  • Training and placement of cataract surgeons in rural hospitals would also enhance provision of eye care for the rural population.

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  • Stolen Up to 70% of staff in DTCs can be stolen from the NHS, leaving NHS hospitals even more understaffed.

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  • This has been achieved by assessing women's experience of hospitals, doctors ' surgeries, social work and even voluntary sector services.

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  • Kwang-Chow-Wan however, is bound to providefor destitute children (see FOUNDLING HOSPITALS) Total in As and pauper lunatics (both these being under the care of the department), aged In Africa and the mdi Algeria and infirm people without resources and Algerian Sahara victims of incurable illness, and to furnish Tunisia medical assistance gratuitously to those West Africa without resources who are afflicted with Senegal..

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  • The indoor institutions are the more important in regard to endowment, and consist of hospitals for the infirm (a number of these are situated at the seaside); of hospitals for chronic and incurable diseases; of orphan asylums; of poorhouses and shelters for beggars; of infant asylums or institutes for the first education of children under six years of age; of lunatic asylums; of homes for the deaf and dumb; and of institutes for the blind.

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  • Those who have passed this examination are competent to perform analysis of all kinds, and generally obtain the preference for various appointments, such as head dispensers in government or other large hospitals, or as analysts.

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  • The serfs were liberated entirely from the arbitrary rule of the landowners and became proprietors of the communal land; the old tribunals which could be justly described as " dens of iniquity and incompetence," were replaced by civil and criminal lawcourts of the French type, in which justice was dispensed by trained jurists according to codified legislation, and from which the traditional bribery and corruption were rigidly excluded; and the administration of local affairs - roads, schools, hospitals, &c. - was entrusted to provincial and district councils freely elected by all classes of the population.

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  • The 20 hospitals, modern in construction and equipment, with 4,500 beds, included special hospitals for children, eye and ear, maternity, tuberculosis, and contagious diseases.

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  • The state institutions consist of state hospitals for the insane at St Peter (1866), at Rochester (1877), established originally as a state inebriate asylum under a law taxing liquor dealers for that purpose, which was subsequently held to be unconstitutional, at Fergus Falls (1887), at Anoka (1900) and at Hastings (1900); the state institute for defectives at Faribault, consisting of the schools for the deaf (1863), blind (1874) and feeble-minded (1879); the state public school for dependent and neglected children at Owatonna (1886); a sanatorium for consumptives at Walker; a hospital for indigent, crippled or deformed children (1907) at St Paul; the state training school for boys near Red Wing; a similar industrial school for girls (established separately in 1907) at Sauk Center; the state reformatory at St Cloud (1887), intermediate between the training school and the state prison, for first offenders between the ages of sixteen and thirty years, in which indeterminate sentences and a parole system are in operation; the state prison at Stillwater (1851), in which there is a parole system and a graded system of diminution of sentence for good conduct, and in which, up to 1895, prisoners were leased under contract (especially to the Minnesota Thresher Company), and since 1895 have been employed in the manufacture of shoes and of binding twine, and in providing for the needs of the prison population; and the state soldiers home occupying fifty-one acres adjoining Minnehaha Park in Minneapolis.

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  • Among other educational establishments, Konigsberg numbers four classical schools (gymnasia) and three commercial schools, an academy of painting and a school of music. The hospitals and benevolent institutions are numerous.

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  • There are also a handsome kursaal (1903), a grand opera house, numerous modern churches, and several hospitals and benevolent institutions, including the Royal Bath hospital.

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  • Among the hospitals and charitable institutions are the Syracuse hospital (1872) for infectious diseases, the Hospital of the Good Shepherd (1873), the Syracuse homoeopathic hospital (1895), the Syracuse hospital for women and children (1887), St Mary's infant and maternity hospital (1900) under the Sisters of Charity, St Joseph's hospital (1869) under Sisters of the Third Order of St Francis, the Syracuse home for aged women (1852), Onondaga county orphan asylum (private; 1841), and two other orphan asylums controlled by the Sisters of Charity, and the state institution for feeble-minded children (1896).

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  • Other public hospitals are a lepers' hospital in Sao Christovao, the military and naval hospitals, the Sao Sebastiao hospital and the isolation and contagious diseases hospitals in Jurujuba.

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  • These latter exist in wondrous number and variety, exercising every imaginable form of good work - education, both primary and secondary; the care of hospitals, orphanages, penitentiaries, prisons; of asylums for the blind, the deaf and dumb, the insane; of refuges for the aged poor and the destitute.

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  • There are several Spanish hospitals in Manila, in two of which the city's indigent sick are cared for at its expense; in connexion with another a reform school is maintained; and there are a general hospital, built by the government, a government hospital for contagious diseases, a government hospital for government employees, a government hospital for lepers, an army hospital, a free dispensary and hospital supported by American philanthropists, St Paul's hospital (Roman Catholic), University hospital (Protestant Episcopal), and the Mary Johnson hospital (Methodist Episcopal).

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  • The objection entertained by many natives to entering hospitals or to altering their traditional methods of cure renders these diseases much more malignant and fatal than they would be in other circumstances.

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  • There are also veterinary station hospitals.

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  • Resolutions were also adopted on the Beguines and their mode of life (see Beguines), the control of the hospitals, the institution of instructors in Hebrew, Arabic and Chaldaic at the universities, and on numerous details of ecclesiastical discipline and law.

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  • Among the state charitable and reformatory institutions are state hospitals for the insane at Topeka and Osawatomie and a hospital for epileptics at Parsons; industrial reform schools for girls at Beloit, for boys at Topeka, and for criminals under twenty-five at Hutchinson; a penitentiary at Lansing; a soldiers' orphans' home at Atchison and a soldiers' home at Dodge City; and schools for feeble-minded youth at Winfield, for the deaf at Olathe, and for the blind at Kansas City.

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  • State penal and charitable institutions include soldiers' and sailors' homes at Grand Island and Milford, an Institute for the Blind at Nebraska City (1875), an Institute for the Deaf and Dumb at Omaha (1867), an Institute for Feeble Minded Youth at Beatrice (1885), an Industrial School for Juvenile Delinquents (boys) at Kearney (1879), a Girls' Industrial School at Geneva (1881), an Industrial Home at Milford (1887) for unfortunate and homeless girls guilty of a first offence, asylums or hospitals for the insane at Lincoln (1869), Norfolk (1886) and Hastings (1887), an Orthopedic Hospital (1905) for crippled, ruptured and deformed children and a state penitentiary (1867), both at Lincoln.

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  • Besides the general hospital, a female hospital in connexion with the Dufferin Fund has recently been built, and there are hospitals for contagious diseases and for lepers in the suburbs.

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  • Infected children were removed to hospitals and the rest of the family was quarantined until they became noninfectious.

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  • I build a house and lay out a garden, and you build hospitals.

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  • The quadrangle plan that had served earlier hospitals well continued to remain popular.

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  • From 1931 it was linked with the Holt Radium Institute which gave radium treatments for patients in local hospitals.

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  • This may reflect the greater number and seniority of junior staff in teaching hospitals compared to the DGHs.

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  • Most hospitals now have a policy for dealing with shoulder dystocia, setting out clearly how it should be handled.

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  • Speech therapists work in a variety of settings including schools, health centers, hospitals or private practice.

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  • We know that all four hospitals in Hertfordshire have been struggling with the same issues of staff shortages at key times of the year.

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  • Hospitals which do not have critical care and diagnostic services should be reconfigured to provide intermediate or step-down care.

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  • The great value of community hospitals as a support and step-down facility is undeniable.

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  • The fever hospitals and the tuberculosis sanatoria have now gone.

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  • This has been achieved by assessing women 's experience of hospitals, doctors ' surgeries, social work and even voluntary sector services.

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  • Both all-women psychiatric hospitals specialized in treating women 's psychological issues.

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  • Many hospitals require a car seat inspection before the baby is allowed to leave the hospital.

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  • Get the Job Done Bag -Many hospitals give bags away as a promotional product for formula or other baby supplies.

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  • Hospitals. In many cases, the staff at the hospital which takes care of your preemie may be able to help you find clothing.

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  • Many hospitals welcome quilts as gifts as well, and nurses commonly place these over incubators to protect babies' eyes from the bright lights.

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  • That's right; most hospitals won't let you leave unless they see your baby safely sitting in an appropriate car seat.

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  • Many hospitals require you to fill out the birth certificate paperwork before leaving, giving you anywhere from 24 to 72 hours to compromise if the issue has not been settled before delivery.

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  • Therapists can be found by calling local hospitals and schools.

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  • The neonatal intensive care units in many hospitals have turned to infant massage as a means of comforting, calming, and also stimulating premature infants.

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  • Some hospitals will bag soiled linens so you can take them home and wash them; however, sometimes your personal baby items still get caught in the huge piles of hospital laundry.

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  • Hearing-Not all hospitals perform a hearing test on newborns, so ask your pediatrician if this is standard.

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  • Did you know that hospitals will not let you leave with your baby in a car without one?

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  • It can be used in homes, schools, hospitals and hotels.

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  • Hello again,We looked around to find more veterinarian hospitals in Kuwait, and we finally found one.

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  • The American Animal Hospital Association accredits veterinary hospitals to ensure that they are following the highest standards of pet care.

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  • However, hospitals can be scary, uncomfortable places for children, and there are many ways to make a hospital stay a little more pleasant.

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  • This causes people to rely on more medications and visit hospitals much more often than they would if they were breathing clean air.

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  • Heart disease is a chief cause of disability, forcing many people into hospitals and health care facilities.

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  • Contact your local Red Cross and hospitals to see if any babysitting classes or CPR certification classes are offered.

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  • The need for professionals to help addicts in private practice, hospitals, recovery programs, or community organizations is one that constantly needs filling.

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  • At hospitals you see plenty of doctors and nurses smoking outside on their breaks, so the dangers of smoking and the correlation with cancer may well be unproven.

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  • He was also a musician and spent years creating detailed sketches of human anatomy, which he based on the human dissections he performed on corpses from local hospitals.

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  • Even with such a busy schedule of television and radio shows, Dr. Drew keeps up his own private practice, and is part of the staff at both Las Encinas and Huntington Memorial hospitals.

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  • Your degree is flexible, with job opportunities in the pharmaceutical, insurance, and federal fields as well as with hospitals and doctor's offices.

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  • Since the ships are at sea and away from traditional hospitals, you can also find Holland America employment if you are a doctor or a nurse.

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  • Founded in 1976 in New Jersey, the organization puts dogs in the places that people need them most -- hospice care, hospitals for both adults and children, and assisted living facilities.

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  • Hospitals sometimes will help a sick child deal with illness by showing her how to care for her doll like it had the same illness.

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  • It was first used in France in 1909 to disinfect the water system and is now used in hospitals, commercial establishments, and private homes.

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  • Other volunteer opportunities abound at hospitals, care centers, service organizations and civic clubs.

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  • Hospitals often transfer recovery patients to nursing homes with strong situational care professionals and programs.

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  • In fact, Chinese hospitals use tai chi combined with conventional medicine as part of their health care programs.

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  • The training program provides part-time, subsidized, community service work in many areas such as schools, hospitals, day care and senior centers.

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  • Senior citizen programs are offered by many cities through their parks and recreation departments, local hospitals, libraries and other community center organizations.

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  • Typical sponsors of senior health fairs include local hospitals, physicians, and other health professionals.

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  • Part A provides coverage for medical services that qualify as medically necessary in hospitals, at home and in nursing homes for short periods of time.

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  • Many hospitals specialize in different methodologies such as cancer, heart disease, burns, kidney disease, or geriatrics.

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  • There are over 1,400 hospitals that specialize in geriatric care in the United States.

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  • Each of the healthcare facilities is located near one or more hospitals in their communities.

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  • The Consumer Consortium on Assisted Living brings awareness to the need for person-centered living, stressing the needs of seniors in hospitals, assisted living facilities and nursing homes.

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  • Some facilities are part of universities and colleges while others are affiliated with hospitals in the region.

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  • Those living in Jersey have a wealth of information at their disposal and among the most outstanding are university hospitals, ear, nose and throat (ENT) specialists, and dentists in the area.

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  • University hospitals are wonderful resources because many are dedicated to researching specific topics, offering the latest developments in treatment approaches.

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  • Many avenues to explore include snoring centers and university hospitals.

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  • St. Petersburg Sleep Apnea Specialists can be found in private practice, working in sleep clinics in local hospitals and affiliated with local dental centers.

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  • Sleep apnea treatment options are available at two major hospitals and local dentists.

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  • Sleep physicians are available at local hospitals for initial consultations.

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  • Sleep clinics are available at two major hospitals in town as well as a major dental center.

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  • St. Petersburg sleep apnea specialists can be found in private practice, working in sleep clinics in local hospitals and affiliated with local dental centers.

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  • Houston sleep apnea specialists are available in private practice, in local hospitals and through sleep centers.

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  • Some patients in hospitals or physical therapy use video games in their treatment, either to enhance fine motor skills or to help them take their minds off any pain that they might be in.

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  • Telemetry monitoring has been available since the early 1990s but is not used in many hospitals as of 2004.

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  • Overall, family involvement is receiving increased attention by the healthcare systems, and the majority of hospitals now offer birthing rooms and maternity centers to accommodate the entire family.

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  • Obstetrics Hospitals Need to Improve Jaundice Monitoring, Commission Says.

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  • A growing number of hospitals are offering these photographs as part of outpatient mole-monitoring services.

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  • Some hospitals require routine screening of newborns for CF.

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  • A subsequent method of evaluating pain in children up to age four years was as of 2004 set to be implemented in 60 hospitals in the Netherlands.

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  • The poisoning typically occurs in small, localized outbreaks in the general population or in large outbreaks in hospitals, restaurants, or institutions for children or the elderly.

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  • For example, over 250,000 individuals are admitted to hospitals in the United States each year because of one of these episodes.

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  • Hospitals can often recommend support groups for such mothers.

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  • Hospitals that do not have their own MRI systems may schedule MRI scans by contracting with a company that brings an MRI scanner in a specially designed mobile trailer.

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  • Susceptible healthcare workers, especially those who work in hospitals, should be vaccinated.

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  • Tetracyclines may be required for children who have developed infections either in hospitals or while traveling overseas.

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  • Many major hospitals and medical centers have travel clinics that provide this information.

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  • Medicaid-A program jointly funded by state and federal governments that reimburses hospitals and physicians for the care of individuals who cannot pay for their own medical expenses.

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  • In hospitals young children need toys that they can manipulate independently, so that parents are free sometimes to focus on medical issues and the healthcare team.

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  • Because Munchausen sufferers often go from doctor to doctor, gaining admission into many hospitals along the way, diagnosis can be difficult.

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  • Overhydration is the most common electrolyte imbalance in hospitals, occurring in about 2 percent of all people.

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  • High-risk mothers should always give birth in hospitals with neonatal intensive care units where appropriate facilities are available to treat asphyxia neonatorum.

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  • They are the leading cause of primary infections originating in hospitals in the United States.

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  • Respiratory distress represents 20 percent of all admissions of children to hospitals, and pneumonia is the underlying cause of most of these admissions.

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  • Many hospitals offer alternative or integrative medicine centers that include yoga classes.

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  • Hyperbaric facilities are specialized and are usually available only at larger hospitals.

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  • Children's hospitals, local school systems, and state governments can assist parents in finding the support and resources they need.

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  • Many doctors and children's hospitals have brochures to assist parents when discussing illness and surgery with their child.

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  • Most states and children's hospitals offer these services and know of organizations in the area that may help these families.

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  • Many hospitals have SCI units geared to help patients develop their independence, and SCI treatment centers are operational in several states with special programs for children.

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  • Family members can help locate resources, such as eating disorder clinics in local hospitals or treatment programs in colleges designed for students.

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  • Therefore, hyperglycemic episodes are also noted to be increasing in frequency among young people admitted to hospitals for treatment of diabetes.

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  • Because no one can predict when a child may face an emergency hospital stay, it is a good idea for all parents to spend some time talking to their children about hospitals.

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  • Many hospitals allow parents and children to tour the pediatric facilities before the hospital stay, further reassuring the child.

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  • Most hospitals provide information to the parents in advance of a planned hospital stay.

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  • Because of privacy regulations established by the Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act (HIPAA), some hospitals require families to select one spokesperson to communicate with health care providers.

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  • A typical feature of children's hospitals or children's hospital units is a playroom where children can interact with others who are undergoing similar experiences.

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  • Children's units in many hospitals are staffed by at least some nurses who specialize in caring for infants and children and understand their special needs.

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  • Most hospitals have designated visiting hours.

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  • Many children's hospitals will assign a teacher to any child able to do some assignments.

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  • Most hospitals have on-site pharmacies where family members can fill the patient's prescriptions; gift shops; and a cafeteria.

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  • However, with the special accommodations that hospitals usually make for children and their parents, a stay in the hospital need not be a traumatic event.

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  • A healthcare team including a pediatrician, surgeon, and social worker is a valuable asset for parents and most children's hospitals can assist parents in finding the support and resources they need.

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  • Laser scalp treatments may be offered at beauty schools and salons, dermatologists, chiropractic offices, hospitals, wellness spas, and sports centers, as well as hair replacement clinics.

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  • In addition to these organizations, consider contact local oncology research centers or hospitals for more information on local wig manufacturers and donation possibilities.

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  • Contact the hospitals in your area and find out what types of jobs you are eligible for while you are waiting to take the exam.

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  • Visit PayScale.com to find out the median salary for different jobs, the median salary based on years of experience, and median by employer type (hospitals are best!).

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  • Licensed radiologists in foreign countries read X-rays at night and on weekends, when radiologists on staff at local hospitals are not available.

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  • University of Chicago Hospitals & Clinics, a 1999 court case in which a man was terminated for lying about his past felony conviction.

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  • Cross Country TravCorps focuses on meeting its organizational mission by providing highly skilled travel nurses and allied health professionals to accommodate thousands of top hospitals throughout the U.S. and the Caribbean.

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  • Cross Country TravCorps places travel nurses in prestigious hospitals in many different locations.

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  • About 35 percent of all medical practitioners work for hospitals, which represent only 1percent of the 595,000 employers in the health-care industry.

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  • Hospitals employ people 24 hours a day, every single day, so night shifts are not uncommon for both nurses and doctors alike.

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  • Most people think of nurses are working in hospitals, but there's a wide range of services nurses perform in today's work.

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  • If there are clinics or hospitals in your area, they might be hiring.

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  • American Mobile travel nursing is a company that specializes in placing nurses into positions at hospitals, clinics and companies that need medical personnel across the United States.

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  • Travel nursing involves working in hospitals, clinics and medical centers in different areas of the United States.

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  • A nurse working with children may be employed in a number of different settings ranging from private pediatrician offices to large hospitals.

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  • The duties in each setting differ, with hospitals mainly dealing in acute care and specialty care and pediatric offices dealing in primary care.

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  • Diplomas in nursing are offered by nursing programs based in hospitals.

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  • With current nursing shortages affecting hospitals and clinics nationwide, you're pretty much assured a stable work environment.

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  • Many hospitals offer economical classes.

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  • Most classes are in hospitals or in medical centers and are scheduled for weekday evenings.

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  • A water birth is a very gentle and peaceful way to welcome your baby, and it is becoming an option in more and more hospitals and birthing facilities.

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  • A few hospitals offer this option, but your care provider can tell you if it's a possibility at your hospital.

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  • At hospitals with portable monitoring units, you can still walk the halls and might be able to take showers.

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  • Most hospitals require parents to have the proper car seat installed correctly before baby is allowed to leave the hospital.

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  • I didn't trust the doctors and hospitals, and we couldn't really afford a doctor/hospital birth anyway.

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  • I realize that hospitals have made many advances since my Mom had her children.

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  • I was also allowed to do some other things that hospitals are, at best, impatient with.

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  • You won't be able to donate if you give birth at home and not all hospitals are able to accept donations.

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  • Visit the National Marrow Donor Program for help in finding out about hospitals near you.

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  • Many hospitals provide support groups for women who have experienced a miscarriage.

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  • This is a relatively new form of pain relief and is not performed in all hospitals.

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  • In most hospitals, the monitor is also hooked up to screens in the nurses' station.

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  • The majority of hospitals will allow you out of bed with an internal monitor in place, as long as you are careful not to pull it out.

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  • She is the founder of Fertility Awareness Counseling and Training Seminars (FACTS) and has been a regular lecturer at various hospitals, clinics, and universities across the county since 1982.

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  • Check at area hospitals for prenatal Pilates classes or ask your doctor or midwife about classes near you.

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  • Many hospitals offer their own prenatal classes.

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  • Stripping the membranes is also a method doctors and hospitals may use to start labor, however, this method should never be used as a self induction technique.

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  • Medicaid pays doctors, hospitals, and clinics and does not offer funds directly to you.

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  • Some hospitals require parents to watch a video about epidurals before they decide whether to use this form of pain management.

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  • Most hospitals have rules regarding the number of people allowed in the birthing room and equipment permissible.

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  • Also, some certified nurse midwives practice out of hospitals and birth centers if you later decide this option is a better choice for you.

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  • Hospitals often have social workers who can put you in touch with other parents who have children with similar conditions.

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  • Women have inner wisdom that will guide them through the process, which means birth can safely take place in homes, birth centers, or hospitals.

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  • Lamaze classes are often held at hospitals and community centers.

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  • If the acupuncturist has a cooperative agreement with a local hospital or pregnancy care provider, make sure to use one of these hospitals and care providers for your pregnancy care.

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  • However, most hospitals have a procedure for patients bringing their own care providers into the hospital, much like the procedure for a patient who wants additional private duty nursing not provided by the hospital.

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  • The Ronald McDonald House accepts donations year round, and so do most major hospitals and shelters.

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  • A routine practice at most conventional hospitals is to give newborn infants an injection of vitamin K shortly after birth.

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  • They do outreach events at prisons, hospitals, festivals and more.

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  • She proved so valuable to the Union that in 1864 the Union army made her the "lady in charge of hospitals" and she was able to use her prodigious talents to organize care for wounded soldiers.

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  • The American Red Cross has a network of 700 chapters throughout the United States, supplies blood donations to over 3,000 hospitals, and trains approximately 12 million people annually in emergency medical skills.

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  • Hospitals never know how much blood of a certain type they will require to help patients, and especially when a disaster takes place, there will be a dramatically increased demand for blood that a certain location may not be able to meet.

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  • These donations are the only way hospitals and other medical institutions can complete blood transfusions to the patients who need it often.

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  • They have had a presence in Haiti since 1950 and operates schools, medical clinics and hospitals as well as overseeing programs for children.

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  • Endowments may be used by various organizations such as nonprofits, churches, schools and hospitals.

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  • Many foundations not only give grants to charitable organizations but to others such as schools and hospitals as well.

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  • I work in universities, hospitals, non-profits, and corporations helping to foster good leadership and team work.

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  • The foundation also introduced the Dove Movie Channel in 1995 to Ronald McDonald's Children's Charities hospitals around the country.

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  • There are currently 30 McDonald's children's hospitals that run the Dove Movie Channel, giving parents one less thing to worry about while their child is ill.

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  • Once known as the Athens Asylum for the Insane, The Ridges stands today as one of the few massive hospitals converted to new use.

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  • Read on to learn more about the Waverly Hills Sanatorium, a place considered by some to be one of the scariest haunted mental hospitals in the United States.

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  • Out of all mental hospitals in the world, Waverly Hills is, by far, one of the spookiest.

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