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Mayo
Clinic in Phoenix/Scottsdale, Ariz., opened in 1987 as a premier
academic medical center in the southwestern United States, where
medical research and education are fully integrated with delivering
the highest-quality patient care.
Campus activity at Mayo Clinic in Arizona is centered around a
beautiful five-story outpatient clinic. This modern facility contains
240 exam rooms, an outpatient surgery center equipped for general
anesthesia, a full-service laboratory and a pharmacy.
Also available are a patient-education library, an endoscopy suite
and a 188-seat auditorium for patient, staff and student education
programs. Services in more than 66 medical and surgical disciplines
are provided, including programs in cancer treatment and organ transplantation.
The campus offers excellent education facilities, including classrooms,
lecture halls, an extensive library and computer lab. The Samuel
C. Johnson Research Center, a 75,000-square-foot research building,
houses scientists, trainees and students focused on molecular genetics,
molecular immunology, molecular and cell biology, molecular chemistry
and surgical research.
The state-of-the-art, 205-bed Mayo Clinic Hospital in northeast
Phoenix opened in 1998 and is the first hospital entirely designed
and built by Mayo Clinic. It has been recognized
as "the Best Hospital in Phoenix" several times by Phoenix
magazine.
Diversity at Mayo Clinic
Mayo Clinic serves patients, families and one another with respect,
courtesy and responsiveness.
The entire Mayo organization, including Mayo Clinic in Phoenix/Scottsdale,
Ariz., Rochester, Minn., and Jacksonville, Fla., values and promotes
diversity. Mayo defines diversity to include all the characteristics
which distinguish individuals or groups from one another.
Mayo Clinic’s goal is to create a caring service environment
where individual differences are valued, allowing all staff to achieve
and contribute to their fullest potential.
See Diversity
at Mayo Clinic in Scottsdale for more information.
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