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The one-way circulatory system carries blood to all parts of your body. This process of blood flow within your body is called circulation. Arteries carry oxygen-rich blood away from your heart, and veins carry oxygen-poor blood back to your heart.
In pulmonary circulation, though, the roles are switched. It is the pulmonary artery that brings oxygen-poor blood into your lungs and the pulmonary vein that brings oxygen-rich blood back to your heart.
In the diagram, the vessels that carry oxygen-rich blood are colored red, and the vessels that carry oxygen-poor blood are colored blue.
HISTORY OF HOSPITALS:
Today the United States is home to 6,021 hospitals that contain over 1 million hospital beds. U.S.hospitals annually admit some 34 million patients who are assigned a bed and receive medical or surgical treatment as inpatients. Hospitals also provide outpatient treatment in clinics or other walk-in, or ambulatory, settings for an additional 483 million patients every year.
Hospitals in the United States are classified by the services they provide (general or specialized), the length of stay they offer patients (short stay or long-term care), and by their ownership (not-for-profit, proprietary, or government owned). Although most U.S. hospitals are classified as not-for-profit, any one hospital will fall into several of the above categories. For example, Methodist Hospital in Houston, Texas, with more than 300,000 sq m (3 million sq ft) of space, is one of the largest short-stay, not-for-profit, general hospitals in the country.
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HISTORY OF HOSPITALS