CLOs on the Move

Cape Fear Valley Health

www.capefearvalley.com

 
Cape Fear Valley is a 916-bed, 8-hospital regional health system, the 8th largest in North Carolina, with more than 1 million inpatient and outpatients annually. A private not-for-profit organization with 7,000 employees and 850 physicians, it includes Cape Fear Valley Medical Center, Highsmith-Rainey Specialty Hospital, Cape Fear Valley Rehabilitation Center, Behavioral Health Care, Bladen County Hospital, Hoke Hospital, Health Pavilion North, Health Pavilion Hoke and Harnett Health.
  • Number of Employees: 1K-5K
  • Annual Revenue: $100-250 Million

Executives

Name Title Contact Details

Similar Companies

Eastern Plumas Health Care Foundation

Eastern Plumas Health Care Foundation is a Portola, CA-based company in the Healthcare, Pharmaceuticals, & Biotech sector.

MemorialCare

MemorialCare is a nonprofit integrated healthcare delivery system that includes leading hospitals – MemorialCare Long Beach Medical Center, MemorialCare Miller Children`s & Women`s Hospital Long Beach, MemorialCare Miller Children`s & Women`s Hospital Long Beach, MemorialCare Orange Coast Medical Center, MemorialCare Saddleback Medical Center, MemorialCare Medical Foundation and and convenient outpatient health centers, imaging centers, surgical centers and dialysis centers throughout Orange and Los Angeles Counties.

Bullock County Hospital

Bullock County Hospital is a Union Springs, AL-based company in the Healthcare, Pharmaceuticals, and Biotech sector.

CareWorx Fully Managed

CareWorx Fully Managed is a market-leading provider of complete technology solutions for senior care communities, including: technology assessments, wireless solutions, a full range of hardware/mobile devices, 24x7 IT helpdesk support and managed IT services.

Rush Memorial Hospital

The first hospital in Rushville was a private hospital built by Dr. John Sexton in 1892. It was built on Fifth Street on a lot adjacent to the Sexton Home at Fifth and Main Street. The hospital was one of the first in southern Indiana and was the only hospital between Hamilton, Ohio and Indianapolis, Indiana. In 1902, this small private hospital was replaced with a two-story building on the same location. When Dr. Sexton retired in 1929, he sold the building to the city. Upon his return from military service, Dr. Frank Green, Sr., opened a six-bed hospital in 1919, above the office which he shared with his brother, Dr. Charles Green, DDS. In 1944, during World War II, the Green Hospital closed. The present Rush Memorial Hospital was opened in 1950. This limestone building included 52 beds and 16 bassinets. In 1971, the hospital completed an expansion project that consisted of an emergency department, modernized ancillary service areas, and a kitchen.