Glendale Adventist Medical Center

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Glendale Adventist Medical Center
Adventist Health
Location
Place Glendale, California, (US)
Organization
Care System Private
Hospital Type Community
Affiliated University Loma Linda University
Services
Emergency Dept. Unknown
Beds 450
History
Founded 1905
Links
Website Homepage
See also Hospitals in California

Glendale Adventist Medical Center is located in the Los Angeles suburb of Glendale, California. It was founded in 1905. Glendale Adventist Medical Center is a sister institution of Loma Linda University Medical Center and is a part of the Seventh-day Adventist hospital system.

Former Glendale employee Efren Saldivar, a respiratory therapist admitted, although he later recanted this admission, to killing 50 terminally ill patients using paralytic drugs (specifically pancuronium bromide). 54 of the 171 suspicious cases investigated by police had been cremated which prevented police from conducting forensic toxicological testing on them, however six of the bodies which were exhumed were found to have the presence of a deadly chemical in their bodies. Salvidar, was fired by the hospital on March 13, 1998.

[edit] Glendale Adventist Academy

In 1907, the Glendale Sanitarium, as it was called, had a one-room school in its basement.

Sometime during the 1930s, that school relocated to a building Chevy Chase and called itself Glendale Union Academy.

Eventually, GUA relocated once more to its current location on Kimlin Dr. and Academy Pl. and renamed itself Glendale Adventist Academy.

negative deekle

[edit] References


This United States hospital article is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it.