Residential, Retirement & Care Homes in Bay Cloverhill, Toronto, ON with website

Find accurate info on the best residential, retirement & care homes in Bay Cloverhill, Toronto. Get reviews and contact details for each business, including phone number, address, opening hours, promotions and other information.
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Results from the 'Residential, Retirement & Care Homes' category in Bay Cloverhill, Toronto

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85 Grenville Street, BAY CLOVERHILL, Toronto, M5S 3A2

(416) 964-8833
The Ontario Nurses' Association (ONA) is the union representing 59, 000 registered nurses and allied health professionals and more than 13, 000 nursing students providing care in Ontario hospitals, long-term care facilities, public health, the community, clinics and industry.
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1075 Bay St, BAY CLOVERHILL, Toronto, M7A 0A5

We offer Senior Services in Toronto. Senior physical activities, memory retention exercises, mental & physical aerobics and much more! Visit our website to see all our at home health care services.
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95 Saint Joseph St, BAY CLOVERHILL, Toronto, M5S 3C2

(416) 925-4368
Nursing & Personal Care, Retirement Homes and Communities, Health Services, Nursing and personal care
Customers highly regard the Cardinal Flahiff Basilian Center's convenient downtown location, proximity to the University, and its suitability as a venue for various events. One customer even gave it a perfect 5-star rating.

47 Queen's Park Cres E, BAY CLOVERHILL, Toronto, M5S 1J4

(416) 424-1714
In 1650, in LePuy, France, Father Jean Pierre Médaille, a Jesuit priest, gathered together six women to form a community to respond to the needs of the poor. From 1789-1794, during the French Revolution many of the Sisters were imprisoned, some even guillotined. Many escaped by taking refuge in their family homes. Thirteen years later in 1807, Mother St. John Fontbonne, one of the Sisters who had been imprisoned, was requested by Cardinal Fesch, Archbishop of Lyon, to gather together a community of former religious in his diocese. Through Mother St. John and several other Sisters of St. Joseph, this new Congregation maintained continuity with the first community founded by Father Médaille. The membership continued to grow and the Sisters quickly set up houses throughout France, then into Europe and the Americas.