Tohoku University (Japan's national comprehensive university) was established in 1867 in Sendai, Tohoku region, by a decree of the Emperor Meiji, and is the third national university in Japan after the University of Tokyo and Kyoto University. It is located in Sendai, a metropolitan city in the Tohoku region of Japan. Formerly known as Sendai Medical University
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Fujita Medical University, ranked No.1 private university in Japan in 2019. Fujita Medical University Hospital is a large general hospital in central Japan, located about 40 minutes from Nagoya Airport. It has 1,435 beds, with a daily outpatient volume of about 3,000, an average of 1,270 inpatients per day, and over 13,000 surgeries per year
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Medipolis Proton Therapy Centre Japan, located in Kagoshima, Kyushu, Japan, is one of the few JCI (Joint Commission International accredited high standard treatment facilities) accredited proton centres in the world.
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Tokyo Cihui Medical University Hospital is one of the top 10 hospitals in Tokyo, Japan.
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The Shizuoka National Epilepsy Centre, also known as the National Shizuoka Centre for Epilepsy and Neurological Disorders, is located in Shizuoka Prefecture, between Tokyo and Osaka, Japan, about one hour from Tokyo. It is a renowned epilepsy centre in Asia and is currently one of the largest epilepsy centres in the world
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The 1,167-bed Dokkyo Medical University Hospital and the 723-bed Echigo Hospital, in addition to the 199-bed Nikko Medical Centre, are among the largest hospitals in the country.
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Founded in the Meiji era (139 years ago in 1882), Kyokumido Hospital is one of the oldest hospitals in Japan. It is conveniently located less than 3 km from Tokyo Station in the hospital district of Ochanomizu, and is a private hospital that combines medical care, education and research.
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Established in 1920, Keio University Hospital is a large university hospital affiliated with Keio University, one of the world's leading private comprehensive universities in Japan.
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Shonan Kamakura General Hospital completed the construction of its new premises on 1 September 2010 and moved to a new hospital in Kamakura Okamoto. The new hospital is spacious, with 2.5 times the floor space of the old hospital, 15 floors above ground and 1 floor below ground, and has 648 beds, including 619 portable beds. There is a helipad on the roof of the hospital. The emergency department has been expanded to five times its original size to cope with the yearly increase in the number of ambulances and emergency patients, and a special lift has been installed for direct access to the operating theatre and the vascular catheterisation unit.
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Japan's top-ranked cancer treatment hospital