Providence Portland Medical Center
History
The Catholic Sisters of Providence order was asked to expand their healthcare offerings on the east side of Portland in 1937. At that time, Archbishop Edward D. Howard requested that the order construct a hospital, originally to be named St. Vincent Hospital East, in reference to the existing St. Vincent Hospital (now Providence St. Vincent Medical Center), which at that time was located in Northwest Portland. The next year the Sisters' plans to build a hospital in the Laurelhurst area were approved and they began buying property at Northeast 47th and Glisan.
Providence Hospital opened in September 1941. A new cancer tower was constructed in the late 2000s, which added 150 new inpatient beds. The 11 story tower houses cancer, surgery, and state-of-the-art patient care facilities. In 2011, the last nuns housed at a convent located within the main building left the facility.
Details
The hospital has 483 licensed beds (397 are staffed), and in 2012 had 21,351 admissions and 63,299 emergency department visits. It has 3,160 employees, of which 1,200 are physicians. Services offered at Providence include oncology, surgical, maternity, women's health, behavioral health, cardiac care, radiology, orthopedics, pharmacy, sleep disorders, urology, and vascular, among others. For 2012, the facility had $1,167,746,000 in patient charges and an operating income of $8,414,000.
See also
References
- ^ Bingham, Larry (August 31, 2011). "Providence Portland Medical Center celebrates 70 years as last sisters of the founding order leave little-known convent". The Oregonian. Retrieved September 2, 2011.
- ^ "Databank 2013". Health System Research and Data. Oregon Health Authority. Retrieved March 20, 2014.
- ^ "Overview". Providence Portland Medical Center. Providence Health & Services. Retrieved March 20, 2014.
- ^ "Our Programs". Providence Portland Medical Center. Providence Health & Services. Retrieved March 20, 2014.
- ^ "Databank 2012". Health System Research and Data. Oregon Health Authority. Retrieved March 20, 2014.