This list of hospitals in Indianapolis includes 21 existing and 11 former hospitals located in Indianapolis, Indiana, United States.
Most of the city's medical facilities belong to three private, non-profit hospital networks: Ascension St. Vincent Health, Community Health Network, and Indiana University Health. Several of the city's hospitals are teaching hospitals affiliated with the Indiana University School of Medicine and its academic medical center at IUPUI, or with the Marian University College of Osteopathic Medicine. Eskenazi Health's flagship Sidney & Lois Eskenazi Hospital serves as the city's public safety net hospital.
Vencor Hospital-Indianapolis, like the chain's other 23 hospitals, will be designed for long-term respiratory patients, Barr said. (...) Construction is scheduled to begin before Nov. 27, with opening tentatively set for April 1 [1993].
Gaily colored inside and out, the $24 million, 87,000-square-foot St. Vincent Children's Hospital will begin accepting patients Tuesday. (...) The new St. Vincent facility is the second free-standing children's hospital in Indiana.
The Northwestside site is the second for St. Elizabeth Ann Seton Hospital, which ran out of bed space at its original location at St. Vincent's Carmel hospital, said Peter H. Alexander, executive director of the specialty hospital. (...) St. Elizabeth is owned by Ascension Health, the hospital system that also owns St. Vincent. St. Elizabeth's Carmel site opened in 1996.
Women's Hospital of Indianapolis will be sold to St. Vincent Indianapolis Hospital, according to a doctor who runs a clinic on the Women's Hospital campus. (...) The 182-bed Women's Hospital, at 8111 Township Line Road, opened in 1983.
The Protestant Deaconess Hospital, at the northwest corner of Mississippi and Ohio streets, will be ready for dedication to-morrow at 2 o'clock.
At the time of a reorganization in August, 1932, the name was changed to the Indiana Christian Hospital and Clinic, and in December, 1933, it became the Deaconess Hospital and Clinic.
Long Hospital opened in 1914 and quickly became an integral part of health care and clinical teaching in the Hoosier state, though it was closed to African-American patients and trainees. The Hospital closed and the building became Long Hall in 1970, with the opening of the new University Hospital.
The 1927 Dedication of the William H. Coleman Hospital for Women. (...) Coleman Hospital closed in 1974, when obstetrics and gynecology were moved to the newly built University Hospital.
This list of hospitals in Indianapolis includes 21 existing and 11 former hospitals located in Indianapolis, Indiana, United States.
Most of the city's medical facilities belong to three private, non-profit hospital networks: Ascension St. Vincent Health, Community Health Network, and Indiana University Health. Several of the city's hospitals are teaching hospitals affiliated with the Indiana University School of Medicine and its academic medical center at IUPUI, or with the Marian University College of Osteopathic Medicine. Eskenazi Health's flagship Sidney & Lois Eskenazi Hospital serves as the city's public safety net hospital.
Vencor Hospital-Indianapolis, like the chain's other 23 hospitals, will be designed for long-term respiratory patients, Barr said. (...) Construction is scheduled to begin before Nov. 27, with opening tentatively set for April 1 [1993].
Gaily colored inside and out, the $24 million, 87,000-square-foot St. Vincent Children's Hospital will begin accepting patients Tuesday. (...) The new St. Vincent facility is the second free-standing children's hospital in Indiana.
The Northwestside site is the second for St. Elizabeth Ann Seton Hospital, which ran out of bed space at its original location at St. Vincent's Carmel hospital, said Peter H. Alexander, executive director of the specialty hospital. (...) St. Elizabeth is owned by Ascension Health, the hospital system that also owns St. Vincent. St. Elizabeth's Carmel site opened in 1996.
Women's Hospital of Indianapolis will be sold to St. Vincent Indianapolis Hospital, according to a doctor who runs a clinic on the Women's Hospital campus. (...) The 182-bed Women's Hospital, at 8111 Township Line Road, opened in 1983.
The Protestant Deaconess Hospital, at the northwest corner of Mississippi and Ohio streets, will be ready for dedication to-morrow at 2 o'clock.
At the time of a reorganization in August, 1932, the name was changed to the Indiana Christian Hospital and Clinic, and in December, 1933, it became the Deaconess Hospital and Clinic.
Long Hospital opened in 1914 and quickly became an integral part of health care and clinical teaching in the Hoosier state, though it was closed to African-American patients and trainees. The Hospital closed and the building became Long Hall in 1970, with the opening of the new University Hospital.
The 1927 Dedication of the William H. Coleman Hospital for Women. (...) Coleman Hospital closed in 1974, when obstetrics and gynecology were moved to the newly built University Hospital.