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Mary Imogene Bassett Hospital
 Stephen King Presents Kingdom Hospital: Making The Rounds (Widescreen) As Mrs. Druse and Dr. Hook try to contact the hospital's ghosts, a convicted murderer arrives as part of his deviously planned prison break. Mrs. Druse prompts a dying patient to help her contact Mary's ghost. As Dr. Hook shows Chris his home deep inside the bowels of an old hospital, Dr. Stegman carelessly polishes up his surgical techniques on a homeless patient. As Rolf is pressed to do away with Peter and Mrs. Druse, Dr. Stegman's induction into the hospital's secret fraternity sends him running into Kingdom's basement of horrors. A heart attack sends a philandering attorney to the Kingdom. Attorney Sheldon Fleischer schemes to move himself to the top of the organ transplant list.
 Democracy by Disclosure: The Rise of Techno-Populism by Mary Graham, In December 1999, the Institute of Medicine shocked the nation by reporting that as many as 98,000 Americans died each year from mistakes in hospitals--twice the number killed in auto accidents. Instead of strict rules and harsh penalties to reduce those risks, the Institute called for a system of standardized disclosure of medical errors. If it worked, it would create economic and political pressures for hospitals to improve their practices. Since the mid-1980s, Congress and state legislatures have approved scores of new disclosure laws to fight racial discrimination, reduce corruption, and improve services. The most ambitious systems aim to reduce risks in everyday life--risks from toxic pollution, contaminants in drinking water, nutrients in packaged foods, lead paint, workplace hazards, and SUV rollovers. Unlike traditional government warnings, they require corporations and other organizations to produce standardized factual information at regular intervals about risks they create. Legislated transparency has become a mainstream instrument of social policy.Mary Graham argues that these requirements represent a remarkable policy innovation. Enhanced by computers and the Internet, they are creating a new techno-populism--an optimistic conviction that information itself can improve the lives of ordinary citizens and encourage hospitals, manufacturers, food processors, banks, airlines, and other organizations to further public priorities. Drawing on detailed profiles of disclosure systems for toxic releases, nutritional labeling, and medical errors, Graham explains why the move toward greater transparency has flourished during a time of regulatory retrenchment and why corporations haveoften supported these massive raids on proprietary information.However, Democracy by Disclosure, sounds a cautionary note. Just as systems of financial disclosure have come under new scrutiny in the wake of Enron's collapse, systems of social disclosure deserve careful examination.
Queen Mary Hospital (Hong Kong) - Queen Mary Hospital (瑪麗醫院), Pok Fu Lam, Hong Kong, is the teaching hospital of the University of Hong Kong. Its main ward tower, Block K, is the tallest hospital building in Asia at 137 metres (28 storeys), and is the second tallest in the world, behind London's Guy's Hospital. St Mary's Hospital (London) - Although there must be many hospitals named St Mary's Hospital, the most famous is probably located in Paddington, West London. Until the 20th century the hospital had its own medical school, which later merged with Imperial College London. Saint Mary's Hospital - There are multiple sites named Saint Mary's Hospital Mary Imogene Robertson - Mary Imogene Robertson (born December 18,1905 in Hickory Grove, Kentucky died on October 31,1948 Hollywood, California) was an American actress.
maryimogenebassetthospital
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