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  1. One of the monumental legacies in American healthcare is a little-known piece of legislation popularly referred to as “Hill-Burton.” Formally named the Hospital Survey and Construction Act, this bill was signed into law by President Truman on August 13, 1946. The Hill-Burton Act provided federal funding to states to build hospitals.

  2. From the mid-nineteenth to the mid-twentieth century, American hospital designers experimented with a number of competing strategies for the role the building design was to play in the health of its occupants. Designers debated whether the hospital building was a therapy in itself, providing a surrounding that would... Hospitals are conundrums.

  3. As America became increasingly urbanized in the mid 1800s, hospitals, first built by city governments to treat the poor, began treating the not-so-poor. Doctors, with increased authority and power, stopped traveling to their sickest patients and began treating them all under one roof.

  4. It is important as a healthcare consumer to understand the history of the U.S. healthcare delivery system, how it operates today, who participates in the system, what legal and ethical issues arise as a result of the system, and what problems continue to plague the healthcare system. We are all consumers of health care. Yet, in

  5. In 2018, America’s hospitals and health systems treated 143 million people in emergency departments, provided 623 million outpatient visits, performed over 28 million surgeries and delivered nearly 4 million babies.1 Every year, hospitals provide vital health care services to hundreds of millions of people.

  6. Hernando Cortes built the first North American hospital in Mexico City in 1524; it still stands today. Near the middle of the 1600s, the French established a hospital

  7. 1 mar 2018 · Drawing on examples from the eastern and midwestern United States, but especially from New York City, Jeanne Kisacky's book provides a detailed examination of alterations in design, engineering, and practices that illuminate how medicine became modern. Admirably, the book makes its over 170 illustrations integral to its analysis.

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