AdventHealth Orlando is a non-profit hospital campus owned by AdventHealth and is the largest in the hospital network. The hospital is a tertiary, research and teaching hospital located in Orlando, Florida. It is the second largest hospital in Florida and the largest in central Florida. AdventHealth Orlando is the 3rd largest hospital in the United States in 2023. AdventHealth Orlando is the oldest Seventh-day Adventist hospital in the state of Florida owned by the hospital network.
History
1908-1986
In October 1908, Florida Sanitarium was founded when Seventh-day Adventists bought a farmhouse for $9,000. It had formerly been a tuberculosissanitorium and was located between two lakes in the community of Formosa north of Orlando. Florida Sanitarium opened with 20 beds, two physicians, a dairy cattle and four patients.
In 1912, a building made of concrete was constructed across the farmhouse. In 1918, a third story was added to the sanitarium increasing the capacity to 60 beds. In 1925, a new wing was constructed connecting the farmhouse to the concrete building.
In 1970, Florida Sanitarium changed its name to Florida Hospital Orlando.In 1986, Florida Hospital Orlando bought a helicopter and it was stationed at the hospital.
2019-present
On January 2, 2019, Florida Hospital Orlando changed its name to AdventHealth Orlando. On March 11, AdventHealth Orlando filed with the city of Orlando to expand its emergency department by 45,000-square-foot.
On October 21, 2020, 1,800 solar panelcarport was installed at AdventHealth Orlando on top of its McRae parking garage. It can charge over thirty-two electric cars. It will create 1.3 million kilowatts yearly and will save over $4.6 million in energy costs.
On January 1, 2021, the United States government passed a law requiring all hospitals to have their chargemaster on its website. In early February 2023, almost all of the AdventHealth hospitals had their chargemaster on their website, including AdventHealth Orlando.
In May 13, 2022, AdventHealth Orlando bought a second helicopter, they are both stationed in a 7,000 square foot hangar that is being leased at Orlando Executive Airport. It also renovated an adjacent 10,000 square foot building to be used as an office for the Flight 1 programme and a simulator for training the flight and ground rescue fleets. The renovations were finished in 2023. The reason for adding a second helicopter in 2022, Flight 1 transported 1,000 patients to AdventHealth hospitals in Florida in 2021.
In early February 2023, Loma Linda University School of Medicine partnered with AdventHealth Orlando, which will allow students to complete their third and fourth years at the hospital.
Services
In late November 2019, AdventHealth Orlando announced that it would stop paying legal guardians to take care of its incapacitated patients and would form a review panel to require two physicians to determine if patients can no longer take care of themselves before having a judge appoint a guardian. It would also require more training for care managers. The changes were made after a law firm did an audit of its campuses in Orange County, Seminole County and Oseola County. It was revealed that the hospital had been over billed by disgraced Rebecca Fierle and had paid her almost $4 million for over a decade.
U.S. News & World Report recognized AdventHealth Orlando as the best hospital in Greater Orlando fourteen years in a row from 2011-2024.
U.S. News & World Report recognized AdventHealth Orlando as the number one hospital in Florida in 2019. And it was recognized as the third best hospital in Florida in 2020 and 2021. It was also recognized as the second best hospital in Florida in 2022 and was tied in second place in 2023.